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Brampton - Brampton Mall, Main Street South converted to A&P Acquired by Metro after sale of A&P Canada Brantford - Lynden Park Mall converted to A&P Food Basics - after Metro Inc. acquired A&P Canada Burlington - Fairview Street converted to Ultra Food & Drug, then a Metro (closed in September 2014) Now a Food Basics (Metro Inc.)
The first enclosed shopping mall was the Park Royal Shopping Centre in West Vancouver, British Columbia, which opened a year later, in 1950. As of May 2017, there were 3,742 enclosed and strip malls in Canada that were larger than 40,000 square feet (3,700 m 2 ).
2 West Street - Brier Park; 4A/4C Mall Link; 5 West Brant - Oakhill; 6 West Brant - Shellard Lane; 7 East Ward - Braneida; 8 Holmedale - Mayfair; 9 Echo Place/ Lynden Rd; 10 NWIA; Evening (9:00pm - 1:00am) and Sunday services (8:30am – 6:30pm) 11 West Brant - Oakhill/ NWIA Holmedale; 12 Eagle Place/ West Brant - Shellard Lane; 13 King George ...
Brantford is known as the "Telephone City" because the city's famous resident, Alexander Graham Bell, invented the first telephone at his father's homestead, Melville House, now the Bell Homestead, located in Tutela Heights south of the city. Brantford is also known as the birthplace and hometown of Wayne Gretzky and Phil Hartman.
Steve Brown Sports Complex is a multi-purpose outdoor sports facility in Brantford, Ontario and located at Lions Park on 20 Edge Street. [1] Built original in 1972 as Lions Park arena, which included a banquet hall for community purposes. Later expanded to include a track field with several baseball and soccer fields with a seating capacity of ...
Barrie (450 Bayfield Street, moved to the Bayfield Mall, closed 1990/1991) Belleville; Bracebridge (505 Muskoka Rd #118W) Brantford; Burlington (Plains Rd W) Hamilton (640 Queenston Rd) Collingwood (Mountain View Mall) Kitchener (700 Strasburg Road at Block Line Road in Forest Glen Shopping Centre) London (4465 Wellington Road)
Renamed the Bayside Mall after the departure of Eaton's, the vacant three level department store has been converted to office space, while most remaining tenants have been independent retailers and non-profits. [10] Demolition of the mall commenced on June 18, 2021, and the site will be replaced by retirement homes to be completed in 2026. [11]
The Brantford and District Civic Centre (More commonly known as simply the Brantford Civic Centre) is a 2,952-seat arena in Brantford, Ontario, Canada. It was built as a Canadian Centennial project in 1967. The Civic Centre is located in the downtown core, adjacent to Elements Casino Brantford.