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A Goodwill store in Oregon (2017) As of July 2011, there are 164 full Goodwill members in the United States and Canada. [16] By 2006, Goodwill Industries International had a network of 207 member organizations in the United States, Canada, and 23 other countries. [17]
Winnipeg's Business Improvement Zones (BIZ) are business districts established to enhances economic development for businesses in a particular neighbourhood. [12] Each BIZ is governed and administered by a board, and is regulated by related BIZ by-laws passed by City Council. [13]
Management of St. Vital Centre is now done by BentallGreenOak (Canada) LP. The mall has 4,661 parking spaces, as well as a city transit bus depot positioned close to an entrance. [ 2 ] [ 5 ] As of 2001, the mall serves approximately 53,825 households within a 5 kilometre radius, with an average household income of $56,925. [ 3 ]
Goodwill, The Amity Group (founded as the Amity Association of Hamilton in 1935 by G. Vert Rayner, Jean Taggart, and T.H.L. Gallagher) is a non-profit social enterprise operating in the Hamilton and Halton regions of Ontario, Canada that helps people to overcome employment barriers and obtain employment.
T. Eaton Co. Limited opened an 86,000 sq ft (8,000 m 2) store in August 1976. [9] As of that same year, Garden City was one of the four largest regional malls in the city of Winnipeg. [10] The Eaton's store closed in 1998, and its space was taken over by a Canadian Tire store. [11] In Spring 2018, Garden City completed a $10-million renovation.
According to city documents, the parkade made a $1.5 million profit in 2008. [5] In 2009, the City of Winnipeg sold the parkade to the owners of the Commodity Exchange and Winnipeg Square for $23.6 million. [6] The sale involved $400,000 in real-estate fees paid to Shindico, the Winnipeg firm that brokered the deal. [7]
Polo North also used to feature Winnipeg’s only Bed Bath & Beyond, and an Atmosphere store. The Plaza at Polo Park —located at the Canad Inns Stadium grounds, adjacent to Scotiabank Theatre —is a mixed-use development that spans over 600,000 sq ft (56,000 m 2 ).
Eaton Place opened on 11 October 1979 [6] as downtown Winnipeg's first indoor shopping mall. It capitalized on its location adjacent to the downtown Eaton's department store, which was then the largest and busiest store in the city, now demolished. The former Eaton's store site is now the city's arena, Canada Life Centre.