News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 02, 2020
 9.7K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 41K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 5.5K     0 

  • Thread starter marksimpson7843
  • Start date
That entire stretch of the PATH should have much better stores than it does so I see these closures as a sign of good things to come. The opening of Swarovski, the Harry Rosen expansion, etc are a good start.

One challenge is, I think, is to attract traffic on the weekends (Saturdays, at least)--most of the stores aren't open at all on weekends, and many close at 6 on weekdays. Harry Rosen and Brooks Brothers are notable exceptions. They're also challenged by the proximity of the Eaton Centre, especially now that the Bay-Adelaide access is open. They're challenged by the fact that higher-end stores aren't always interested in concourse-level stores. And finally, they're challenged by the fact that the PATH is not under a single management group. Cadillac-Fairview, Oxford, and Brookfield (the three major players) all have their own strategies and preferred tenants. I'm very interested to see where things go - the Royal Bank Plaza definitely upped their tenants a notch when they reno'd.
 
Panera opened up today and it was packed. Great addition to this area.

panera.jpg

The sandwiches are great. This is only the second one to open in the GTA (1st was at Square One).
 
And the updates keep coming fast and furious. Signs are up for Lasik MD coming soon in the old Fairweather spot. Across the way, a coming soon sign is up for Gateway News. As that's the same newsstand that's just down the escalators and that is the last occupant of the GAP/Source block, I suspect the entire block is beeing freed up for Rexall (or at the very least, for a complete reno of the block). JasonParis - maybe you can confirm?

This is becoming a daily thing!

The Gateway News has indeed moved out to a temporary location (I didn't check to see where), as has the postal outlet. The entire back area on the concourse level below the former Fairweather and the Board of Trade is now blocked with hoarding.
 
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...rket-stalwart-is-on-the-block/article2323456/

Kensington Market stalwart is on the block

ADRIAN MORROW
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Feb. 02, 2012 3:00AM EST



For more than five decades, European Quality Meats and Sausages has been a Kensington Market mainstay, drawing customers from across the city with hearty steaks, spicy kielbasa and tangy cured ham.

But now, septuagenarian founder Morris Leider is contemplating closing the business, the latest sign of a slow shift in the retail makeup of the colourful enclave.

Mr. Leider has put the building – a two-storey, 823-square-metre storefront at the head of Kensington Avenue – up for sale, with a $1.8-million asking price. If he can get a good deal, he will look at closing the shop; if not, he will keep it open, said Mr. Leider’s son, Larry. European’s other outlet, in Etobicoke, will stay in business no matter what happens.
 
This is becoming a daily thing!

The Gateway News has indeed moved out to a temporary location (I didn't check to see where), as has the postal outlet. The entire back area on the concourse level below the former Fairweather and the Board of Trade is now blocked with hoarding.

Gateway is up in the old Sleuth and Statesman spot, clearly temporary. And apparently the Source has not left FCP, but has moved in beside Indigo, possibly permanently.

In other news, the outside hoarding on the FCP podium is down, meaning the Harry Rosen display window is up and running again.
 
This is actually the 4th in the GTA. The others are at Bathurst and Centre and Hillcrest Mall. There are also planned openings this year in Mississauga and Etobicoke.
 
Another Toronto bookshop is closing its storefront http://www.newstalk1010.com/News/localnews/blogentry.aspx?BlogEntryID=10345516

The seventh Toronto bookshop in three years has announced that it is closing its storefront.

Books for Business at Adelaide St W and Bay St will close by the end of March.

The store, dubbed North America's largest business bookshop, will then concentrate on online sales after expanding its warehouse in Oakville.

Last month, The Book Mark in Bloor St W closed down. Others that have shut their doors the past couple of years include Pages Books, David Mirvish Books, and the Flying Dragon.

Books for Business CEO, Sean Neville, says this is just the way of the world now.

He blames two factors on having to close his storefront - the rise of e-books and online discounters like Amazon, making it too expensive to run a physical store.

"We're fighting the market," Neville says. "That saddens me and the store but that's kind of the way business works."

Neville says, though, there is a positive here for the hardcore book lovers.

"Access to books today is probably greater than even before," he says of the growth of online sales.

He also says he doesn't expect the physical bookshop to become entirely extinct in Toronto, comparing the bookstore to the music store.

"There are still places you can find CDs and vinyl in Toronto," Neville says. "Not like there was 10 years ago, but there are some because there is still some demand for the purists."

He says what is changing is the way people can get their physical books, not whether they can get them at all, and he doesn't think the population is about to become illiterate because of the slow death of the bookstore.

"Do people listen to less music these days? Nope, just differently," Neville says.

Most inventory in the store is now 35 per cent off and Neville says they will either close as of April 1st or whenever their inventory is sold out.
 
The sandwiches are great. This is only the second one to open in the GTA (1st was at Square One).

Coffee was good. The blueberry scone was delicious. Probably won't ever have a sandwhich or soup there, but I'll definitely go back for a coffee and scone to go.

Also, the NYC shop that opened next to HMV (taking over what used to be part of HMV) last year as closed! Hurrah! They are moving northward. Does anyone know what's taking its place?
 
pandara bread is pretty overpriced but I guess not to bad for the area.... you can get much better food at the urban eatery for the same price or less though

this is an interesting space.... to bad UNIQLO isn't ready for canada that store is godsent

http://www.thegridto.com/life/real-estate/know-vacancy-471-queen-st-w/

Forever 21! Good grief. That store is ridiculous. It's men's 'department' is an insult (it's just a small corner). UNIQLO would be AMAZING. Not ready for Canada? Are they mad? One in Toronto, one in Montreal and one in Vancouver. Done. Easy. J Crew; there's another one with their women's only line in Canada.
 
UNIQLO would do very well here with their svelte urbanite sizing. Almost every store in town carries sizes designed to fit midwest America's hulking monstrosities.
 
http://mobilesyrup.com/2012/02/10/m...a-retail-store-in-toronto-by-the-end-of-2012/

Microsoft reportedly planning to open a retail store in Toronto by the end of 2012

By Ian Hardy on February 10, 2012 at 1:17pm in Mobile News

Microsoft is apparently planning to open a “Microsoft Store” in Toronto soon. New reports from The Verge have Microsoft entering our fine land for the first time, directly going to compete with Apple’s 22 retail locations. The store will be located somewhere in Toronto – could be in the Eaton Centre or Yorkdale Mall – with timing of a grand opening set to happen before the holiday period.

As to what the Microsoft Store will sell – all Microsoft products. So software, keyboards, mice, Xbox 360 and Windows Phone handsets. Taking a look at the Microsoft Store site it shows that there are currently 16 locations across the United States, but Kevin Turner, Microsoft’s COO, stated last year that they plan to open 75 new Microsoft Stores within the next 3-years.

Source: TheVerge
 
In talks with Oxford to put them in Yorkdale next to the expanded Apple store in the new expansion phase.
 
from http://canadianmalls.blogspot.com/
Johnston & Murphy, an upscale retailer of men's and women's footwear, apparel, luggage and leather goods, owned by Genesco (a publicly traded retailer of branded footwear, licensed and branded head-wear and licensed sports apparel and accessories, as well as, a wholesaler of branded and licensed footwear), has opened its first Canadian location at Ivanhoe Cambridge's Mapleview Mall in Burlington, ON (1,516 sq.ft.).

Johnston & Murphy footwear products have been sold by retailers in Canada, such as Walking on a Cloud and independent footwear retailers for a number of years. However, the opening of their Mapleview Mall shop is their first foray into selling Johnson and Murphy goods in its own branded locations. I assume that this location is a test location and the success of this store will ultimately determine their future roll-out of additional shops.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Maybe this is what's happening to the Xbox store that's shuttered and now covered, on Queen West?

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/tech-news/microsoft-eyes-canada-for-first-store-outside-us/article2337061/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=feedburner&utm_content=Google+Reader&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheGlobeAndMail-Business+%28The+Globe+and+Mail+-+Business+News%29

Microsoft eyes Canada for first store outside U.S.
MARINA STRAUSS AND OMAR EL AKKAD
From Tuesday's Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Feb. 13, 2012 6:41PM EST
Last updated Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2012 8:49AM EST

Microsoft (MSFT-Q30.580.090.28%) is plotting its first physical store in Canada, playing catch-up to archrival Apple Inc. in a race that mirrors the one for smartphone supremacy.

With only 14 stores in the U.S., Microsoft is making a big push to expand its chain, emulating a strategy Apple tapped into more than a decade ago. Today, Apple runs more than 360 outlets globally – mostly in the U.S. – to showcase its brand and draw consumers. In addition to generating revenue, the often boldly designed storefronts tend to function as a form of marketing.

Now Microsoft is betting that it too can become a magnet for gadget-hungry shoppers in the mall, in the process shrinking Apple’s lead in the pivotally important mobile device space, where the iPad and the iPhone still generate the biggest single source of industry profit.

“It’s a hard one – Apple has such an enormous lead,” said Kaan Yigit, president of consultancy Solutions Research Group. “Microsoft is late into the tablet and smartphone game, but they’re not out of it yet.”

The sparring between the two tech giants has heated up as Microsoft rushes to follow in Apple’s path by developing an operating system for smartphones and tablet computers. Unlike Apple, Microsoft doesn’t manufacture its own mobile hardware – instead, the company takes the same approach it used with the Windows operating system, letting third parties build the hardware on which Microsoft software runs.

Even as Apple has spearheaded the virtual storefront movement with its iTunes software and app store, the company has also invested in its iconic retail outlets all over the world.

Last summer, Microsoft chief operating officer Kevin Turner said Microsoft plans to open 75 stores in the next two to three years.

In most respects, Microsoft stores largely mirror Apple’s retail outlets in look and feel. Microsoft’s open-concept spaces feature hardware and software products, as well as technical specialists to help customers buy and fix their products. Unlike Apple, however, Microsoft also devotes a significant portion of its shelf space to products built by outside partners such as Hewlett-Packard.

Microsoft’s Canada store would be only its first outside the U.S. – raising the question of whether it can roll them out fast enough to overtake its key competitor.

The challenge is all the more striking because of Apple’s retail sales muscle. Its stores generate about $4,000 in sales per square foot, roughly 10 times more than the average at U.S. malls, estimated Neil Stern, senior partner at retail consultancy McMillanDoolittle LLP in Chicago. In some Apple stores, sales-per-square-foot are believed to be as high as $6,500, he calculated.

“The numbers are like nothing like we’ve ever seen in retail,” Mr. Stern said. “The Microsoft stores I’m in – there is traffic in the store. But the sales-per-square-foot are fractional to Apple. The Microsoft stores are still in the business of selling an experience to customers, not necessarily selling a lot of product.”

Now Microsoft is borrowing from Apple’s playbook to try to create its own mall footprint. While Microsoft officials would not comment, industry sources said the company is close to a deal for a store in Canada. Some said that the outlet will be at Yorkdale Shopping Mall in Toronto, which already has an Apple store.

Anthony Casalanguida, general manager of Yorkdale, said he couldn’t confirm or deny the information, but said he has visited other Microsoft stores in U.S. malls to check them out. They are often close to an Apple store, and are similar in look and service-oriented concept. “If we’re successful enough to get them into Toronto and Yorkdale, I think it would be a tremendous asset to the property,” he said.
 

Back
Top