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Both locations in Montreal. [28] Walmart: Department: 2021: 3 in ON, 2 in AB, 1 in NL: due to low sales: Zellers: liquidation: 2011–2013: 189: Target acquires the leases of 189 Zellers stores, most of which it would convert into their own stores. Zellers would continue as a chain in 64 smaller communities. Zellers: liquidation: 2012: 64
Norgate Shopping Centre (first shopping mall built in Canada, a strip mall) [34] Place Vertu [35] Saint-Leonard. Le Boulevard Shopping Centre [36] (partly in Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension) Carrefour Langelier; Place Michelet [37] Place Provencher [38] Place Viau [39] Verdun. Le Campanîle & Place du Commerce [40] Ville-Marie, Montreal
This is a list of small shopping centres (mostly neighbourhood shopping centres) in the island of Montreal. A neighbourhood shopping centre is an industry term in North America for a shopping centre with 30,000 to 125,000 square feet (2,800 to 11,600 m 2 ) of gross leasable area , typically anchored by a supermarket and/or large drugstore.
The following is a list of Canada's largest enclosed shopping malls, by reported total retail floor space, or gross leasable area (GLA) with 750,000 square feet (70,000 m 2) and over. In cases where malls have equal areas, they are further ranked by the number of stores.
The bank in the mall is Banque de Montreal (BMO) and its restaurants are Tim Hortons and Subway. It was opened on October 24, 1979, by Provigo, developed at the cost of $6 million. [3] It inaugurated with 37 stores and was the first shopping centre to be wholly-owned by Provigo. [3] The anchors were Provigain and Canadian Tire. [3]
Canada's first indoor mall was the Lister Block, originally opened in 1852, in Hamilton, Ontario. [1] The Lister Block was destroyed by fire and rebuilt in 1924. [2] In 2011 the building was completely rebuilt. [3] Opened in 1949, the first shopping mall in Canada is the Norgate shopping centre, a strip mall in Saint-Laurent, Montreal, Quebec.
At 115,478 m 2 or 1,242,990 sq ft, it is both the largest enclosed shopping centre in the Greater Montreal area and the largest mall operating on a single floor in all of Quebec. Virtually untouched by the ongoing decline of indoor malls, it typically ranks among the top shopping centres in Quebec for its number of visitors as well as sales per ...
Upon its opening, Galeries d'Anjou was the second largest shopping mall in Canada after Yorkdale in Toronto. [10] The mall was the joint property of Simpsons Limited and Cemp Investments. [11] It is the second shopping centre in the Montreal area developed and owned by the duo of Simpsons and Cemp Investments. [12]