Grocery Store Retail to Anchor Massive Mixed-Use Development

Date:

Share post:

Save-On-Foods will be an anchor retailer in the massive University District mixed-use development in Calgary and the grocery store will be part of a building with close to 300 residential units above it.

The 38,000-square-foot grocery store will break ground at the end of this year and is anticipated to open in 2020.

James Robertson, president and CEO of West Campus Development Trust which is spearheading the major residential, commercial, retail and office project on University of Calgary land, says the grocery store is an important anchor for the project.

“Whenever you’re establishing a community, a grocery store is kind of a central component of day-to-day life. It not only allows residents to maintain their lifestyle within the community without having to leave, it also allows us to kickoff our retail or to start up our retail component of this community in a substantive way,” says Robertson. “And so if you can imagine  you have a grocery store, a coffee shop, a bank, a wine store, you have all the basics of everyday life. It was very important for us to do that as close to the beginning of the development of this community as possible.

“We will have residents moving in in 2018 and it should be within a year to a year and a half of them moving in we have a grocery store opened.”

Rendering: University District
University District

University District, which is on 200 acres of land, will cost an estimated $25 billion to $35 billion to build for the entire project. When full build-out is complete, in 15 to 20 years, the community will have 15,000 to 17,000 people living and working there.

Located at 32nd Avenue N.W. and Shaganappi Trail, the project will include 40 acres of open space, 8.7 million square feet of buildable area, 250,000 square feet of ground floor retail along nine blocks, 1.5 million square feet of office space, and 6,000 to 6,500 residential units.

“Calgary is enjoying a surge of high density urban mixed-use development projects that are at the leading edge of the Canadian real estate industry,” says Michael Kehoe, an Alberta-based retail specialist in Calgary with Fairfield Commercial Real Estate. “Currie Barracks, East Village and the University District are prime examples.

Rendering: University District
Rendering: University District

“Often these projects are transit-oriented and feature a combination of residential, retail and office uses. The cornerstone of these projects are the grocery anchor stores tailored for the urban professional consumer that will become focal points for the neighbourhoods. In a high-density mixed-use project, the grocery anchor will provide a multitude of non-retail services and often occupy multiple levels with office and residential above. The major grocery chains have created branded urban concepts that can adapt to a variety of footprints and micro-markets.”

Save-On-Foods is opening its eighth Calgary area store October 6 with its second store in Airdrie.

Company president Darrell Jones says the University District is going to be a “fantastic place” to be for the grocery store.

“It’s an ability for young people to understand our brand which is a modern brand. The store will have everything that young people and families want. Sushi. Wing bar. Hot meals. Hot soup. Starbucks coffee. All the things for modern families that are in a hurry,” says Jones. “E-commerce. They’ll be able to click and collect or have it delivered to their home today.”

“So we think that our offer today which is very modern, very cosmopolitan, is a perfect thing for the university area.”

Above the grocery store, the mixed-use rental building, built by Gracorp Capital Advisors Ltd. (Gracorp), will feature 288 units of residential space. The units are anticipated to be one-to-three-bedroom floor plans that range in size from 528 square feet up to 1,130 square feet.

“The vision for University District is for it to be one of Calgary’s most livable communities, offering mixed-use residential and retail opportunities, giving residents everything they need in one central location,” says Barry Poffenroth, director of real estate at Gracorp Capital Advisors Ltd. “We are offering housing options with size, space and flexibility in a more compact form with easy accessibility to the grocery store and other retail services along the main street.”

Jones says there is a trend to build residential above retail space because real estate is becoming more expensive and there is a need to maximize what can be developed on land. It is also a concept that is convenient for residents who have amenities right in their building.

West Campus Development Trust says nine additional retailers will be part of the grocery store block, and have been carefully chosen to meet a host of community needs and interests — from neighbourhood coffee shop and specialty restaurant, to pet store and wine merchant. In the coming months, the trust will be announcing some of those retailers, and the newest hotel resident and builder, located across the street from the grocery store.

Rendering: University District

Kwangyul Choi, a postdoctoral research fellow under the Richard Parker Professorship, jointly appointed in Haskayne School of Business and Faculty of Environment Design at the University of Calgary, says having a grocery store as an anchor in a neighbourhood is a good idea for residents in giving them a number of opportunities for social interaction.

Albert Tonghoon Han, Postdoctoral Research Fellow to the Richard Parker Professorship in Metropolitan Growth and Change, jointly appointed in the Haskayne School of Business and Faculty of Environmental Design at the University of Calgary, says mixed-use developments balance the mix of commercial and residential use to take advantage of providing more amenities closer to where people live.

Mario Toneguzzi
Mario Toneguzzi
Mario Toneguzzi, based in Calgary, has more than 40 years experience as a daily newspaper writer, columnist, and editor. He worked for 35 years at the Calgary Herald covering sports, crime, politics, health, faith, city and breaking news, and business. He is the Senior News Editor with Retail Insider in addition to working as a freelance writer and consultant in communications and media relations/training. Mario was named as a RETHINK Retail Top Retail Expert in 2024.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

More From The Author

RECENT RETAIL INSIDER VIDEOS

Advertisment

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Subscribe

* indicates required

Related articles

Why Ted Baker Canada Entered Creditor Protection and What it Means for Retail [Expert Comments]

Experts discuss the struggles of the company and its brand positioning, as well as the financial situation of the Canadian subsidiary which is struggling with 25 stores.

Loblaw Share Price Goes Up Following Boycott, Weston Wealth Increases by $540mill [Op-Ed]

Sylvain Charlebois discusses the Loblaw boycott and reasons behind it, saying that Canadians haven't bought in and that a code of conduct is needed to truly impact food prices.

Anatomy of a Leader: Samir Kulkarni, CEO of Showcase

The CEO of the well-known retailer discusses growing up in Brampton in an entrepreneurial family that owned various businesses, and how he grew to become the owner and head of a chain of over 150 stores.

As Retailers Collect More Data, Cybercrime Hits Retailers Including London Drugs [Expert Comments]

With London Drugs stores in Western Canada being closed this week due to a cybersecurity incident, several experts discuss the challenges of retailers collecting customer data and what it means for the future.

Shake Shack Announces 1st Toronto Location at the City’s Busiest Pedestrian Intersection [Interview]

Expert Lisa Hutcheson says that Shake Shack will drive foot traffic with its popular foodservice concept that is officially expanding into Canada.

Oakridge Park in Vancouver Announces Luxury Jewellery Brand Retailers Ahead of Spring 2025 Opening [Feature]

Included will be one of the world’s largest Rolex stores, and first-to-Canada locations for two of the world’s most exclusive and expensive jewellery and watch brands. 

Canada’s Top Shopping Centres by Sales Per Square Foot [Analysis]

Retail Insider analyses the top malls in Canada by sales per square foot, including which malls are top, what cities they're in, and how Canadian downtowns include several properties.

Retailer ‘Handmade Saskatchewan’ Eyes Store Expansion with Local Products [Interview]

The unique retailer with three locations is looking to open another in Regina as it works with local vendors, supporting the economy while offering one-of-a-kind products.

Why the Loblaw Boycott is a Useless Attempt to Address Grocery Pricing [Op-Ed]

Sylvain Charlebois says that organizers of the boycott don't understand retail, and that an effective boycott would have involved avoiding all big-box players that collectively dictate the market.

INLAND in Toronto Marks 10 Years with May Event: Interview with Founder Sarah Power [Video Interview]

Craig and Sarah discuss INLAND's evolution into Canada's leading retail pop-up platform for emerging designers, the unique retail locations in years past and the partnership with Toronto Metropolitan University.

Cadillac Fairview Portfolio Dominates in ICSC Mall Productivity Ranking Study [Interview]

The Canadian landlord owns more than half of the top 25 ranked shopping centres by sales per square foot, speaking to the strength of the portfolio and ongoing investment in the properties.

Non-Alcoholic Beverage Retailer ‘Sobr Market’ Opens Expanded Toronto Flagship Store [Interview/Photos]

Addressing a trend, the transformed downtown store features two levels with a tasting bar on each floor for customers to sample products before they purchase.