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Timmins Square is a shopping centre in the Mountjoy neighbourhood of Timmins, in Northeastern Ontario, Canada. It has 281,168 square feet (26,121.4 m 2) of space. It has approximately 50 stores. [1] Characterized as a regional shopping centre, Timmins Square draws customers from a surrounding area whose population is about 150,000. [2] [3]
The population density was 31.2 people per square mile (12.1/km 2). There were 344 housing units at an average density of 11.9 per square mile (4.6/km 2 ). The racial makeup of the town was 97.11% White , 0.22% Black or African American , 0.11% Native American , 0.22% Asian , and 2.33% from two or more races.
It's not clear whether the closure is part of Macy's existing plans to close 150 stores by 2026.
Kingston is located at (43.693508, -89.128563 [ 4 ] According to the United States Census Bureau , the village has a total area of 1.54 square miles (3.99 km 2 ), of which, 1.32 square miles (3.42 km 2 ) of it is land and 0.22 square miles (0.57 km 2 ) is water.
The mall was renamed Kingston Collection in 2014. [2] On November 11, 2014, the mall was evacuated due to a Tier2 HazMat situation. [3] A witness in the food court said that she was getting a coffee and the lights went out, then the fire alarm went off. People also in the cinema were evacuated, with people describing the smell like pepper spray.
Mountjoy, which comprises all of the city's populated area lying west of the Mattagami River, includes the Timmins Square shopping mall, Home Depot, Canadian Tire, Mark's, Best Buy, Staples and a Walmart Supercentre. Franco-Ontarians make up the vast majority of Mountjoy's population. It was originally known as "Mountjoy Township" and was ...
The mall was designed by the architect Lou Resnick and developed by Jacobs, Visconsi, and Jacobs Co., of Cleveland, Ohio, the developer of Brookfield Square in Milwaukee. [1] The 56,000-square-foot (5,200 m 2) Manchester's store was later replaced by a food court. West Towne is the sister mall to the East Towne Mall which opened a year later.
Sears accepted the offer and, by 1997, a new 110,000-square-foot (10,000 m 2), two-story Sears was built onto Janesville Mall as a fourth anchor, while the older Beloit Plaza Sears was closed. With the addition of the Sears anchor, the mall grew to 627,128 square feet (58,262 m 2 ) in size.