Hudson’s Bay confirmed on Monday that it will be closing its two-level department store in downtown Regina. It marks the fourth Hudson’s Bay store to close in a Canadian downtown core since 2020.
The downtown Regina Hudson’s Bay store will close next year, marking the end of a 55-year run of the retailer in the city. The Cornwall Centre store was the only Hudson’s Bay store left in southern Saskatchewan (others closed in decades past). The Hudson’s Bay store at Midtown Plaza in downtown Saskatoon will remain open, and will be the only one left in the province.
The retailer provided a statement to Retail Insider for this article. “HBC continually evaluates its real estate portfolio and looks at opportunities to optimize holdings. Through normal course of business, Hudson’s Bay has made the decision not to renew the lease for the Hudson’s Bay store at Cornwall Centre in Regina. With the lease expiring, the Hudson’s Bay store will close to the public in April 2025.”


“We thank our customers in Regina for their patronage and hope to continue serving the community. Hudson’s Bay will continue to operate its store in Saskatoon, and will also serve customers through thebay.com. We are committed to treating every associate with respect and fairness through this process, and transfer opportunities will be explored where feasible.”
Hudson’s Bay moved into Cornwall Centre in downtown Regina in the year 2000, taking over the 182,000 square foot lease of a former Eaton’s store that had operated there since the mall’s opening in 1981 (Eaton’s closed in 1999 with the bankruptcy of the company). Prior to opening at Cornwall Centre, Hudson’s Bay operated a standalone store at the corner of Hamilton Street and 12th Avenue that opened in 1970.
Cornwall Centre’s management company Cushman & Wakefield provided a statement for Retail Insider. “We have recently learned that Hudson’s Bay will close its Cornwall Centre location next year. While we recognize the longstanding relationship this iconic brand has held within the shopping centre, as we look to the future of Cornwall Centre and the downtown revitalization plans, we are confident about the opportunities this brings for our customers and the community.”


The Cornwall Centre Hudson’s Bay store’s sales were said to be struggling — in the fall of 2021, the retailer closed its basement level. Sources reached out to Retail Insider over a year ago, speculating on the store’s closure.
Prior to taking the former Eaton’s location at Cornwall Centre, Hudson’s Bay operated a three level standalone store on Hamilton Street that created a commercial vibrancy in the area. The Hudson’s Bay Company also had a presence in Regina in decades past when it owned the Simpsons chain of department stores — Simpsons opened its first Regina store in a warehouse district north of the downtown core in the 1920’s, and in 1946 took over local department store R.H. Williams at Hamilton Street and 11th Avenue where it operated until June of 1981. The Hudson’s Bay Company acquired the upscale Toronto-based Simpsons chain in 1978 and closed the unprofitable Regina location just a few years later.
The 573,000 square foot Cornwall Centre has been a dominant force in downtown Regina since its opening in 1981, and currently features about 80 retailers over two levels. The centre’s other anchor store was Sears Canada, which shut in 2018. Cornwall Centre also was once connected by an over-the-street pedway to an upscale mall called The Galleria which closed in the early 2000s. Interestingly, the Hudson’s Bay Company said in 1981 that its decision to close the unprofitable standalone downtown Regina Simpsons store was partly because of the opening of Cornwall Centre, which had new competitor anchors Eaton’s and Sears.


Department stores were once the domain of the downtown core, and suburban retail is partly responsible for the near death of retail in many downtowns across North America. At one time, downtowns in communities across the continent boasted department stores of various sizes. Fast forward to today, and few downtown department stores remain, with that number dwindling in Canada as Hudson’s Bay continues to close locations.
Since the spring of 2020, Hudson’s Bay has closed three key downtown department stores in Canada. In November of 2020, the massive 675,000 square foot Hudson’s Bay store in downtown Winnipeg closed, marking the end of an era for the building which once served as the company’s main flagship store. In June of 2021, Hudson’s Bay closed its 168,000 square foot store in downtown Edmonton, which followed the closure of a Holt Renfrew store nearby. In May of 2022, Hudson’s Bay closed one of its two downtown Toronto stores at the corner of Yonge and Bloor Streets, leaving the flagship Bay store at Yonge and Queen that began as the flagship store for Simpsons.
Hudson’s Bay has closed other stores in Canada in recent memory, including at Jardins Dorval in Montreal in the fall of 2021 and a small store on Banff Avenue in Banff, Alberta, in the summer of 2023. Vancouver-based retailer Arc’teryx is said to have leased part of the former Banff Bay building, which is under renovations.

Hudson’s Bay also recently announced the closure of its store at Burlington Centre in Burlington, Ontario, which is now set to shutter in February of 2025.
For months, Retail Insider has been visiting Hudson’s Bay stores across the country, and something appears to be a bit off. Most of the stores visited appeared to have escalators out of order, and there’s a noticeable lack of music being played in many locations. Even some washrooms in some stores are out of order — sources told Retail Insider that the lack of music and washrooms was due to not paying bills, while the cost of electricity and economizing could be responsible for the escalator outages. On Tuesday of this week, Retail Insider visited the Queen Street flagship store in Toronto where many of the escalators were not running, and all four passenger elevators were out of commission that day.
Recent news reports out of Vancouver indicate that the downtown flagship Hudson’s Bay store is in rough shape — escalator and elevator outages means people have to find their way floor-to-floor via large staircases in the store, something witnessed in January by this author during a trip to the city. Last week, The Vancouver Sun reported on the store and interviewed customers who generally gave negative reviews of the in-store experience and lack of maintenance. HBC announced during the pandemic that the store would be redeveloped with an office tower built above, and sources now tell Retail Insider that a new proposal for the building is in the works.

The closure of another downtown Hudson’s Bay department store is bad news for Canada, which has only a handful remaining. Hudson’s Bay continues to operate downtown stores in Calgary, Saskatoon, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal.
The 400,000 square foot downtown Calgary Hudson’s Bay store was downsized to about half of its former retail space during the pandemic, and is now three floors (down from six in years past). The 174,000 square foot downtown Saskatoon store relocated from a standalone building to Midtown Plaza in 2000, similar to what was done at the time in Regina. The 800,000 square foot Toronto Queen Street store continues to operate with an integrated/adjacent Saks Fifth Avenue store which has seen better days, while the 335,000 square foot downtown Ottawa Hudson’s Bay store continues to operate across the street from CF Rideau Centre. In Montreal, the massive 655,000 square foot downtown Hudson’s Bay store was slated for redevelopment, and so far only the store’s retail space has been downsized with some upper levels shut off to the public.
In decades past, Canadian downtowns were home to multiple department stores — that included names such as Eaton’s, Woodward’s, Hudson’s Bay, Simpsons and Morgans. The first four of these were all present in Canadian downtowns until 1991. Sears Canada also operated downtown stores until it began selling off real estate (making Nordstrom’s entry into Canada possible) before Sears Canada’s demise in 2018.
The United States, as well, has seen its city downtown cores decimated over the years, with a few large traditional department stores remaining. And that number will be reduced even more with the recent announcement that Macy’s would look to vacate its large store on Union Square in San Francisco. The only other American downtowns with a meaningful department store presence today include New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington DC and Boston.
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