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The shopping mall is located just north of Highway 417 at the corner of St. Laurent Boulevard and Coventry Road. The mall opened in October 1967 housing 50 retailers with Simpson-Sears (later Sears), Freimans and Dominion as original anchors. [1] Sears was the last original anchor to leave the mall, closing on January 8, 2018 due to bankruptcy ...
Saint-Laurent. Centre commercial Village Montpellier [34] Les Galeries Saint-Laurent [34] Méga Centre Côte-Vertu [34] 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 ...
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.
Place Vertu is a shopping mall in the borough of Saint-Laurent in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is located on Côte-Vertu Boulevard , at the corner of Cavendish Boulevard. The mall is about 830,000 square feet (77,109.5 m 2 ) in size, and has a high-rise building.
This is a list of notable buildings in Ottawa, ... St. Laurent Shopping Centre; ... List of shopping malls in Ottawa This page was ...
Opened in 1949, the first shopping mall in Canada is the Norgate shopping centre, a strip mall in Saint-Laurent, Montreal, Quebec. The first enclosed shopping mall was the Park Royal Shopping Centre in West Vancouver, British Columbia, which opened a year later, in 1950.
RÉSO, commonly referred to as the Underground City (French: La ville souterraine), is the name applied to a series of interconnected office towers, hotels, shopping centres, residential and commercial complexes, convention halls, universities and performing arts venues that form the heart of Montreal's central business district, colloquially referred to as Downtown Montreal.