User:Zanimum/Shopping centres in Mississauga
Indoor shopping malls in Mississauga are plentiful.
Central Parkway Mall, Dixie Outlet Mall, Dixie Park Centre, Erin Mills Town Centre, Meadowvale Town Centre, Sheridan Centre, South Common Centre, Square One Shopping Centre, and The Shops at Westwood Square, formerly Westwood Mall. A new facility, Galleria Centre, is under development.
Overview
editSherway OMB
Indoor malls
editThe Chase Square
editCentral Parkway Mall
editWebsite | www |
---|
The mall was open at least by 1978, when it included a Safeguard Discount Drugs outlet.[1]
As of 1983, Central Parkway Mall had a four-screen cinema, Dominion, McDonald's, and Safeguard Drugs.[2] The theatre has 1000 seats.[3]
Two of the four men who attempted the murder of Barbara Turnbull had intended to rob the McDonald's at the mall a week earlier.[4] A handgun was found in a garbage container there.[5]
In 1984, Peel looked at leasing space at the mall.[6] As of 1986, the Region of Peel withdrew its offer to lease space for the Health Department East District Office, in favour of the Crestwood Centre.[7] In 1992, Hillmond Investments Ltd. (William Sorokolit) took legal action against the Region of Peel for Breach of an Offer to Lease, dated 1984.[8]
As of 1989, the mall was home to Mississauga Parent/Child Centres.[9]
Cinestars movie theatre has hosted the Mississauga Independent Film Festival in 2008,[10] [11]
Until 2012, MPP Dipika Damerla's constituency office was in the mall.[12] As of 2012, an outreach facility for Ontario Early Year Centres was in Central Parkway Mall.[13][14]
The mall was Peter Fonesca's constituency office (as of 2009),[15] Frank Dale's 2010 election office,[16]
In 2013, part of the mall was flooded, causing electrical damage that closed the Passport Canada offices.[17]
Tolias Landscaping and Plowing was a tenant at the mall in 2011, when one of its plows was stolen, running down Sgt. Ryan Russell in Toronto.[18]
http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3130554-teens-robbed-at-gunpoint-in-the-valleys/ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3140749-craving-for-chinese-food-leads-to-stolen-car/ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3124306-pedestrian-hit-dies-in-hospital/ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/4165722-overnight-smash-and-grab-at-central-parkway-mall/
Dixie Outlet Mall
editDixie Park
edithttp://www.insauga.com/top-5-food-courtscentres-in-mississauga
Erin Mills Town Centre
editMeadowvale Town Centre
editMeadowvale Town Centre was built by Toronto's Markborough Properties Ltd., the developer of the Meadowvale subdivision. The scheduled March 1978 opening featured a 55,000 square foot Dominion supermarket, the largest in the chain. The entire centre was 500,000 square feet.[19] The first phase cost $6 million, while the second phase cost $20 million, and was scheduled to begin construction on October 2, 1979. The expansion would bring the site to 425,000 square feet.[20] As of 1984, there were 80 shops and restaurants.[21] In 1998, Cambridge Shopping Centres Ltd. sold Meadowvale Town Centre and four other malls to ENA Realty Group Ltd., for a total of $78.5 million.[22] In 2003, First Capital Realty paid roughly $63 million for the mall, while it was in the final stages of a redevelopment. In the project, the mall would have 387,000 sq ft of leasable area.[23] First Capital maintained ownership until at least 2007.[24]
Mississauga Chinese Centre
editapparently aka Sino Mall
Rockwood Mall
editA 1969 planning study for the "North Dixie" area suggested commercial retail on the northeast corner of Burnhtamthorpe and Dixie Roads. By January 1972, developers had officially proposed a 21-acre site for the mall, and were asking the Town of Mississauga to build a large department store, supermarket, two small movie theatres, 107,000 square feet of retail, and a service station. They also were in talks with the Mississauga Library board, in the hopes of establishing a central library on the site.[25][26]
The mall's Dominion store opened in January 1974, with United Farm Workers picketing in relation to the Delano grape strike.[27] Dominion office staff had refused to meet with UFW representatives.[28]
The mall was open at least by 1974.[29] As of 1976, the mall added an expansion.[30]
In 1990, a 2-year-old from Streetsville was riding a lumber cart with 2 four-by-fours at Beaver Lumber in the mall, when it flipped over. He died in hospital.[31]
Sheridan Centre
editOpening date | 1969 |
---|---|
Developer | J. D. S. Investments |
Website | www |
The mall's official opening was November 13, 1969,[32] with Education Minister Bill Davis presiding.[33] The mall's initial closing time was 10 pm, in contrast to most retail shopping centres, which would close at 6 pm.[33] As of opening, 200 area high school students were employed by the mall, with another 100 hires expected, which would make them the largest employer of youth in Mississauga.[33]
Early retailers included Ingeborg Shoes,[34] King Donut,[33] Kmart (opened by at least August 1969),[35] Thom McAn,[36] and Sheridan Mall Cinemas I and II.[37] The theatre stayed until at least 1980.[38]
J.D.S. and Eaton's held tenancy discussions between 1986 and 1987.[39] During Christmas 1987, the Eaton Sheridan Place used the tagline "Now We're The Place".[40] Tenants in this era include Club Monaco,[41] Cultures Fresh Food Restaurants[42] Living Lighting,[43] Liz Porter plus size women's clothing,[44] Pot Pourri's housewares[45]
A grand re-opening was held October 26 to 29 and 31, 1988
Miscellaneous
edit- T. Eaton Holdings Limited filed for a trademark on "Eaton Sheridan Place" in 1988, cancelling it in 1990.[46] In 1993, Mississauga South MPP Margaret Marland referred to the mall as Eaton Sheridan Place.[47] In October of that year, Duarte v. LensCrafters International Inc., 21 (Ontario Court (General Division) 1994-09-16) ("In October, 1993, the plaintiff, Dr. Duarte asked LensCrafters to terminate their sublease agreement at Eaton Sheridan Place."), Text.
- Eaton's itself has referred to the facility as Eaton's Mississauga Sheridan Shopping Centre.[48]
- Eaton's had some level of control over tenant in the mall.[49]
- Skydome Designs lists the mall as a project.[50]
See also
edit- Sheridan Centre Bus Terminal
- TitleEaton's Mississauga Sheridan Shopping Centre property management records
- CVCA To view, order RG 1–254 , barcode B297747.
South Common Centre
editSouth Common Centre is part of a 100-acre municipal centre for the Erin Mill South housing development, that aimed to centre all "the social, educational, recreational, religious, cultural and shopping structures required by an eventual population of 50,000." The Don Mills Developments Ltd. project was designed with discussion aided through the city, over three years of input, by architects James A. Murray and George Abram.[51] The Loblaws store opened in October 1980.[52]
In 1983, the mall was acquired from Cadillac Fairview by Sutter Hill Developments, Ltd., the real estate division of Canada Permanent Mortgage Corporation, itself a subsidiary of Genstar Corporation of Vancouver.[53]
In 1987, a large crowd waited outside the mall, after watching Rambo in the mall's theatre. After police threatened to arrest one man for trepass, he and his friends went "berserk", according to police testimony. That man, Orren Lawson, and two others, were arrested for assaulting police, and Lawson was sentenced to jail. At trial he alleged he was assaulted by police in the jail, as well.[54] The theatre was still there until at least 1995.[55]
As of 2000, the mall was owned by Alexis Nihon Group, of Montreal.[56]
Since at least 2011, the mall has been anchored by Walmart, No Frills, and Goodlife Fitness.[57]
The Shops at Westwood Square
editWebsite | www |
---|
The Shops at Westwood Square is an indoor shopping mall in the Malton neighbourhood of Mississauga. Previously known as Westwood Mall, the name change happened
Square One Shopping Centre
editWestdale Mall
editPlanned
editGalleria Centre
editAddress | 1525 Dundas Street East |
---|---|
Owner | Terracap Group |
Architect | Turner Fleischer Architects Inc. |
No. of stores and services | 600[58] |
No. of anchor tenants | 2 (Galleria Supermarket, HSBC)[58] |
Total retail floor area | 238,000 sq ft[59] |
No. of floors | 3 |
Parking | Covered |
Website | www |
The 5.71 acre site sold in September 2008 for $7.2 million.[60]
The mall will be anchored with Galleria Supermarket, which currently has locations in Thornhill and York Mills.
The mall ran a crowd-funding campaign on NexusCrowd Inc., for accredited investors with at least $10,000 investments.[59] "Tens" of investors put up $500,000 for the $100-million facility. NexusCrowd will liquidate the position when the mall opens.[61]
Abandoned projects
editApplewood Mall
editAs of 1969, the Applewood Mall was planned for construction, intended to be the largest mall in Mississauga.[62]
The Towers Plaza on the northwest corner of Dixie Road and Dundas Street contested the development, with a hearing at the Ontario Municipal Board beginning in late 1969. Robert Macaulay represented the property against the Town of Mississauga's solicitors John G. Parkinson and Len Stewart. Two weeks were set aside for the hearing, given the multiple years for the Sherway hearings.[63]
http://search.canadiana.ca/view/omcn.SouthPeelWeekly_29/159?r=0&s=6 http://search.canadiana.ca/view/omcn.SouthPeelWeekly_29/472?r=0&s=6 http://search.canadiana.ca/view/omcn.SouthPeelWeekly_29/97?r=0&s=6
In late June 1969, an hearing into the development began, with Robert McAuley the Towers Plaza on the northwest corner .
Power centres
editHeartland Centre
editReferences
edit- ^ A13 12 Dec 1978
- ^ "Omni Homes' record is perfect". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. 7 May 1983. p. H20.
- ^ "Central Parkway Cinemas ad". Toronto Star. 22 January 1981. p. A16.
- ^ "McDonald's robbery plotted, trial told". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. 29 March 1985. p. 14.
- ^ Fagan, Drew (24 April 1985). "Guns found in suspects' home after milk store clerk crippled". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. p. M4.
- ^ https://www.peelregion.ca/council/council_minutes/1980s/1984/rcmin19840913.htm
- ^ https://www.peelregion.ca/council/council_minutes/1980s/1986/rcmin19860424.htm
- ^ https://www.peelregion.ca/council/council_minutes/1990s/1992/rcmin19920423.htm
- ^ https://www.peelregion.ca/council/council_minutes/1980s/1989/rcmin19890608.htm
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/whatson-story/3137486-brothers-present-independent-film-festival/
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/5696611-japanese-car-culture-doc-premieres-in-mississauga/
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3124914-mpp-moves-to-new-office/
- ^ https://www.peelregion.ca/council/agendas/pdf/2012/hsa1.pdf
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/community-story/3836162-sticking-it-to-young-readers/
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3141948-steelworkers-get-meeting-with-mpp/
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3159450-common-sense-in-ward-4/
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3887307-passport-office-at-central-parkway-mall-closed-for-rest-of-week/
- ^ http://www.mississauga.com/news-story/3161342-plow-owner-offers-condolences/
- ^ Keddy, Barbara (24 February 1978). "Markborough optimistic". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. p. B6.
- ^ "Canadian Cablesystems gets $35 million contract". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. 29 September 1979. p. B15.
- ^ "Innovative designs in Meadowvale homes". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. 11 February 1984. p. H10.
- ^ "News bulletins". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. 16 December 1998. p. B7.
- ^ "First Capital buying Mississauga centre". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. 4 June 2003. p. B5.
- ^ McLeod, Lori (6 October 2007). "The ultimate fixer-upper". The Globe and Mail. Toronto ON. p. B4.; the title refers to the Morningside Mall, Scarborough.
- ^ "Mall location called ideal". The Mississauga Times. Mississauga ON. 19 January 1972. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
- ^ "Shopping centre approved despite planners' concern". The Mississauga Times. Mississauga ON. 2 February 1972. p. 2. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
- ^ "Police end protest: United Farm Workers picket store opening". The Mississauga Times. Mississauga ON. 27 February 1974. p. 3. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
- ^ "Support grape boycott". The Mississauga Times. Mississauga Times. 27 February 1974. p. 6. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
- ^ "Kenwood dealers ad". The Toronto Star. 23 May 1974.
Star Electronics, 4905 Dundas St. W, Rockwood Mall
{{cite news}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ "Dixieburn Terrace: Successful blend of siting and design". The Globe and Mail. 14 February 1976. p. BL1.
- ^ "Tot dies under cart". The Globe and Mail. 11 May 1990. p. A9.
- ^ "Sheridan mall opens with clowns, goodies". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 13 November 1969. p. 31.
- ^ a b c d "Sheridan Mall is a student job mecca". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 27 November 1969. p. 25.
- ^ ""for him for her the sale" ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 8 January 1970. p. 26.
- ^ ""Kmart family shoe department" ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 20 August 1969. p. 35.
- ^ ""walk warm with the cool ones" ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 11 December 1969. p. 70.
- ^ http://ao.minisisinc.com/scripts/mwimain.dll/2581/1/2/97530?RECORD&DATABASE=LISTINGS_DESC_INT
- ^ http://ao.minisisinc.com/scripts/mwimain.dll/2581/1/4/98940?RECORD&DATABASE=LISTINGS_DESC_INT To view, order RG 56-9 , barcode B247551.
- ^ http://ao.minisisinc.com/scripts/mwimain.dll/2581/1/11/709637?RECORD&DATABASE=LISTINGS_DESC_INT To view, order F 229-501-127 , barcode B382480.
- ^ "This is the place for Christmas excitement!". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 1 December 1987. p. W9.
- ^ ""Club Monaco comes to Eaton Sheridan Place" ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 25 October 1988. p. West 15.
- ^ "Cultures Fresh Food Restaurants ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 8 October 1988. p. D28.
- ^ ""It's our pre-Christmas light event!" ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 27 October 1988. p. A25.
- ^ ""liz in larger sizes means more!" ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 13 October 1988. p. J3.
- ^ ""Pot Porri's Top 40 Special Values" ad". The Toronto Star. Toronto ON. 22 October 1988. p. Starweek 73.
- ^ http://trade.mar.cx/CA614124
- ^ http://hansardindex.ontla.on.ca/hansardECAT/35-3/l011-3.htm
- ^ http://ao.minisisinc.com/scripts/mwimain.dll/2581/1/10/709635?RECORD&DATABASE=LISTINGS_DESC_INT To view, order F 229-501-127 , barcode B382480.
- ^ http://ao.minisisinc.com/scripts/mwimain.dll/2581/1/13/709648?RECORD&DATABASE=LISTINGS_DESC_INT To view, order F 229-501-127 , barcode B382480.
- ^ http://skydomedesigns.com/projects.html
- ^ "Church unit planned for housing project". The Globe and Mail. 9 Mar 1974. pp. B2.
- ^ "Loblaws ad". The Toronto Star. 7 Oct 1980. p. L1.
- ^ Lush, Patricia (7 Oct 1983). "Real estate assets can provide tunds for expansion: BUILDING AND REAL ESTATE". The Globe and Mail. p. B4.
- ^ "Convicted man alleges police racism, brutality". The Globe and Mail. 14 May 1987. p. A20.
- ^ "Canadian Bacon ad". The Toronto Star. 29 September 1989. p. D6.
- ^ King, Deborah (25 January 2000). "Montreal building to keep historic feel: Ste-Catherine St. landmark considered architectural gem and new owner plans to keep it that way". The Globe and Mail. p. W2.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20111107224743/http://www.southcommoncentre.com/store-directory.html
- ^ a b "TERRACAP ANNOUNCES ITS INVOLVEMENT IN THE RETAIL CONDOMINIUM DEVELOPMENT OF GALLERIA CENTRE". 15 April 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- ^ a b Dmitrieva, Katia (8 September 2015). "Mississauga mall to be partly financed by crowdfunding". Hamilton Spectator. Hamilton ON. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- ^ "PART V // Market Conditions". INSPIRATION LAKEVIEW // Phase 1 Background Report (PDF). Mississauga ON: City of Mississauga. November 2010. p. 70.
- ^ Brent, Paul (29 October 2015). "Canada's first crowdfunded real estate deal closes". Property Biz Canada. Real Estate News EXchange. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- ^ http://search.canadiana.ca/view/omcn.SouthPeelWeekly_29/97?r=0&s=4
- ^ "OMB Hearing Into Applebowl Mall Opens With Towers Plaza Objection". South Peel Weekly. 25 June 1969. p. 1.