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YUM Candy Store Survives Pandemic in Vancouver

YUM Ice Creamery and Sweet Shop.

Sweet shop and ice cream retailer, YUM, has officially survived the pandemic with its storefront in Vancouver’s Mount Pleasant neighbourhood.

Likely stemming from a guilty pleasure during his time as a body builder, the owner of the sweet shop has curated a selection of over 200 candies and gourmet sweets. The curation delves internationally from serving far-flung options like Hong Kong-style bubble waffles, and it also makes all of its ice cream and baked goods in-house.

“Life is short, have a treat” says Michael Gorenstein as he opened his labour-of-love at 4150 Main Street in Vancouver. The end result has given patrons access to numerous top sellers, including the vegan cat gummies and espresso chocolate beans as well as the champagne and Prosecco gummy bears.

The shop currently offers its assortment for sale within its brick-and-mortar storefront only and its website (at www.yumsweetshop.com) has online shopping planned for the future as well.

The following is a selection of sweets which YUM sent over to taste-test, including Rainbow Gummy Bears, Have Your Cake Bites, Vegan Cat Gummies and Raspberry Pig Gummies.

Interior of YUM Ice Creamery and Sweet Shop.
Interior of YUM Ice Creamery and Sweet Shop.

The beautiful teal candy-parlour, designed by Hazel + Brown Design Company, amplifies the nostalgic candy shop experience with the beautiful gold detailings, French bistro designs, and classic bar top seating.

Interior of YUM Ice Creamery and Sweet Shop.
Interior of YUM Ice Creamery and Sweet Shop.

T&T Market Preparing to Open at Willowbrook Mall in Langley

T&T Supermarket at Willowbrook
T&T Supermarket at Willowbrook - Photo by Lee Rivett

Vancouver-based T&T Supermarket will be opening it’s doors at Langley’s Willowbrook Mall in fall 2021.

Retail Insider covered the announcement of the shopping centre’s expansion back in 2020, which included a 30,000 square foot Nordstrom Rack and Winners location.

The 39,040-square-foot T&T grocery store will open at the north end of Willowbrook in the fall of 2021. The Asian grocery concept, founded in Vancouver, will be the first for Langley and will feature an in-house bakery, Asian deli, sushi, and Chinese BBQ departments. The Willowbrook location will also offer Asian-style health services as well as herbal and naturopathic products plus an onsite insurance agency, pharmacy, financial services, among other services.

T&T held a hiring fair on July 16-18th, which saw recruiting for large number of roles in departments throughout the store. The Willowbrook Mall website had the following hiring fair description “T&T Supermarket is currently hiring for the following positions in its Meat, Seafood, Produce, Grocery, Kitchen/Sushi, Bakery, Fulfillment, and Cashier departments …positions as Store Associate, Assistant Receiver, Cooler Keeper, Assistant Cooler Keeper, Beauty Advisor, Cook, Assistant Cook and more.”

We’ll be following the opening of this location of T&T Market and more news coming out of Willowbrook Mall

T&T Supermarket Hiring Fair at Willowbrook Mall

WILLOWBROOK MALL MAP

Inside Altitude Athletic, a First-To-Canada Specialized Fitness Facility Concept in Toronto

Altitude Athletic - Photo by Dustin Fuhs

Altitude Athletic, a specialized fitness facility that simulates high altitude conditions, has opened steps from the Financial District in downtown Toronto.

Altitude Athletic has created a gym that can simulate high altitude conditions by lowering the oxygen levels while utilizing science to train for situations that athletes of all abilities will face in sport and adventures. Essentially, the team has built a mountain environment in Downtown Toronto.

“Toronto is at sea level, and although it would be awesome for many of us, it’s not practical to fly off to the mountains every weekend,” shared Altitude Athletic owner Melanie Miller. “So I had a vision to build Canada’s largest publicly accessible altitude training facility.”

The 1,200 square foot facility opened at 56 Colbourne Street on July 23rd, with construction and pandemic delays adding to the construction buildout.

Gyms and indoor activities were hit hard with pandemic restrictions, which have recently been allowed to open after Ontario hit Stage 3 in the reopening plan.

Click for Interactive Google Map
Altitude Athletic – Photo by Dustin Fuhs

“Since science and innovation lay the foundation of Altitude, our vision also included translating this into our services and empowering our facility with a passionate and knowledgeable team,” Miller shared.

Toronto sits at 76 meters (approx. 250 feet) above sea level where there is approx. 20.9% oxygen in the air. In the altitude room, they are able to reduce this amount to as low as 9.7% simulating an elevation of over 6,000 meters (approx. 20,000 feet).

Each day of the week, the facility will rotate through three altitude zones, aside from Sunday, when the facility will remain at sea level for fitness assessments (or for sea level workouts). The altitude zones are as follows:

  • Montane Zone: 4000 ft – 6000 ft / 1219 m – 1828 m 
  • Subalpine Zone: 6000 ft – 8500 ft / 1828 m – 2590 m 
  • Alpine Zone: 8500 ft – 11500 ft / 2590 m – 3505 m

The facility was created in response to a market trend that saw fitness enthusiasts looking for access to the same tools as the pros and to train for elevations that they would encounter in competitions and adventures around the world without having to leave the city. 

Altitude Athletic – Photo by Dustin Fuhs

The facility is located in a block that will be seeing a significant change, with the addition of 65 King Street East at Leader Lane. The 18-storey office development by Carttera Equities will have a total gross floor area of 36,147 square metres of office space and 1,628 square metres of retail space at street-level.

Google has leased the entirety of the office space.

65 King Street East with Google Signage, designed by WZMH and IBI Group for Carterra (Via UrbanToronto)

Altitude Athletic worked with Lindsay Hepburn of SRS Canada. Interior was designed was Wolfe Interior Design and Paradigm Architecture and Design was the architect firm on the project.

Podcast [Interview]: Peter Simons of La Maison Simons Discusses Pandemic Business Struggles

Craig and Peter Simons have an honest discussion around the challenges the retailer faced over the course of the pandemic, and what the future might hold for the retailer which is striking unique partnerships.

Thank you to podcast partner Swyft which is a rapidly growing Canadian same-day shipping company that has partnered exclusively with Retail Insider. Learn more about Swyft’s scalable, affordable best-in-class last mile solution.

The Interview Series podcast by Retail Insider Canada is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players. Also check out our The Weekly podcast where Craig and Lee discuss popular content published on Retail Insider which is part of the The Retail Insider Podcast Network.

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Drop us a line at Craig@Retail-Insider.com. You can also rate us in Apple Podcasts or recommend us in Overcast to help more people discover the show!

Background Music Credit: Hard Boiled Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

New Owner of ‘Frank And Oak’ to Expand Brand with Stores in Canada and Globally After Restructuring: President Interview

Frank and Oak at CF Toronto Eaton Centre
Image: Frank and Oak at CF Toronto Eaton Centre

Months after acquiring the retail brand Frank And Oak, the new owner, Unified Commerce Group, has big plans for the retailer which went through the bankruptcy protection process last year.

The retailer was acquired by the new owner in October 2020.

Dustin Jones, President of UCG Canada Holdings and founder and CEO of Unified Commerce Group, said UCG will provide Frank And Oak with the necessary resources to continue to nurture the brand’s strong following within Canada as well as fuel its expansion into the United States and its growth into new markets, including Asia.

Dustin Jones

“There’s so many things we loved about the brand but ultimately it’s about nine and a half years old as a brand and we found it to be one of the most well-recognized Canadian brands that had the strongest potential for global scale,” said Jones.

“The brand itself, its purpose is material science and solving the pollution and the areas of the fashion industry that a lot of people don’t like to talk about. The fashion industry is the second most polluting industry in terms of effect towards the climate crisis that we’re facing.

“Frank And Oak has always been based in this terrific material science that really looks at how we can take the things that we consume today and how we can be kinder to our product and our people and our planet as a function of those things.”

Unified Commerce Group was officially launched in September 2019. Jones is a lifetime retailer with expertise in digitization. He has spent his entire retail career, just over 20 years, digitizing different areas of retail. His first 14 years was spent building macys.com and building Macy’s omnichannel. Then he moved to China for about five years working with the Alibaba group and a fashion portfolio group which owned 26 fashion brands.

Unified Commerce Group was founded by Jones and Wall Street veteran Greg Freihofner to build a portfolio of purpose-driven brands that connect with consumers on a global scale, and in the world’s most dynamic markets. The company has headquarters in New York, Montreal and China.

Greg Freihofner

“We focus on supporting founder created brands. Not necessarily brands that were started by some retail professional like myself but brands that were started by passionate founders with purpose. Brands that have real purpose and real commitment to something bigger than product and as a function of their purpose they end up creating product,” said Jones.

“We believe this is going to be the post COVID trend in terms of brand loyalty and consumer loyalty. And so purpose doesn’t have to be cause oriented. It can also be activity based, but at the end of the day the content is about the purpose not necessarily about just selling a sweater.

“And for somebody in retail who’s been part of the designer trend, the luxury trend, the fast fashion trend, the athleisure trend, for me the next phase of my career I really wanted to get behind supporting these purpose led brands. And I had spent a lot of time studying them pre COVID and we built Unified Commerce Group so we could embrace these companies and help them get from the wonderful place that they had gotten to today to a new frontier that allows them to be a globally relevant and powerful brand.”

Frank and Oak product tag
Frank and Oak product tag – Photo by Dustin Fuhs

UCG’s tech-enabled platform drives scale for its brands through unified services; harmonizing strategy and execution to design, operate, and push boundaries in retail.

Launched in 2012 by long-time friends Hicham Ratnani and Ethan Song, alongside a small group of passionate creatives, Frank And Oak designs men’s and women’s apparel and accessories from its Montreal headquarters that are made to last with the highest standards to keep up with demanding lifestyles, while ensuring minimal impact on the planet.

A certified B Corporation, Frank And Oak is beloved in Canada and the US for its core values of sustainability, transparency, and functionality that are reflected in both its products and business practices, said UCG.

Like many retail brands worldwide, Frank And Oak was significantly impacted by the coronavirus pandemic and, as a result, filed a notice of intention to make a proposal in June 2020.

Jones said the brand had about 20 stores in Canada leading into COVID. Today there are 11.

“We have a large expansion plan that’s underway. In near term we’ll open up a new portfolio of stores to go along with the existing portfolio,” he said.

“We’re in the process. We’ll go through a large PR campaign in about a month, maybe a month and a half, where we’re going to speak very broadly about what the strategy is and all the investments we’ve made in the company,” said Jones.

Over the past nine months, Jones said UCG wanted to get to know the organization well to protect the brand, the values of the brand and the talent it had worked so hard to cultivate.

It also spent time looking at efficiencies in how the brand operates. It also looked at the customer experience. The omnichannel experience is a critical investment to make and connecting that experience into one seamless, loyalty based customer flow. A new loyalty program will also be launched this fall.

Frank and Oak at CF Toronto Eaton Centre
Frank and Oak at CF Toronto Eaton Centre – Photo by Dustin Fuhs

“We have really strong ambitions for the brand. For us we think more about communities than we do stores. Where are we not saturated and where do we have existing consumers that want to belong to our brand in a more loyal way? We have also very strong customers in the United States and so you’ll hear us talk about later this year where our expansion plan looks like in the different communities in the United States. Our approach to that which isn’t just digital and physical but a combined effort. We’ll also talk in September about our expansion plans outside of North America which are well under way,” said Jones.

“We have very large numbers for our store portfolio. It will definitely be more than double the existing. But in terms of a specific number I probably wouldn’t give you one but it’s definitely far more significant than the 11 stores we have today and it takes us three or four years to really build out the fleet.

“We believe stores have to be redesigned and COVID taught everyone that they have to be redesigned and so our process isn’t looking at sales per square foot it’s looking at experience per square foot. So our stores have to go through a redesign. So the 11 we have today will also have to be redesigned. The first redesign happens in August and September and that really is about technology and enablement of our associates and connecting with our consumer and connecting with the consumer journey of the brand while in our store. But the long term will be about how do we design more experience and more community into these store environments and how these stores become a window to the brand lifestyle.”

Disney Confirmed to be Closing 10 Additional Stores in Canada in August, Leaving Only 3 Prior to Full Exit

Disney Store Closure Image: ShopDisney.com

Disney has confirmed on its website (ShopDisney.com) that it will shutter almost all of its Canadian locations next month after Retail Insider first reported on the the retailer’s full Canadian exit in April of this year. Prior to Friday, Disney would not confirm any additional Canadian store closures after a full exit was announced for British Columbia last month. After the next round of store closures, Disney will only have three remaining store locations in Canada, all in the Greater Toronto Area.

Liquidation sales in the next 10 locations confirmed to close will start on Monday July 26 according to a source with Disney who was not authorized to speak on the record. The 10 stores are expected to shut permanently either on August 6 or thereabouts.

Store employees in the 10 soon-to-close locations, known as ‘cast members’, were uninformed until now and for the most part were telling shoppers that the ‘rumours’ of the Canadian exit were ‘untrue’ and that it was “business as usual”. The official language will change as liquidation sales commence across the country except in three stores in the Toronto Area.

The newest round of Disney locations slated to close are in Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario. In Alberta, Disney will close all stores in Edmonton at West Edmonton Mall and Kingsway Mall as well as in Calgary at CF Market Mall and Southcentre. In Manitoba, Disney operates a single store at CF Polo Park in Winnipeg and it is also included in this round of closures.

Disney Store at SouthCentre Mall in Calgary.
Disney Store at Southcentre Mall in Calgary. Photo: Jessica Finch

In Ontario, five Disney stores set to close early next month include Toronto area locations (Yorkdale Shopping Centre, Upper Canada Mall), Hamilton (CF Lime Ridge), Ottawa (CF Rideau Centre), and London (CF Masonville Place). For now, Disney has chosen to keep its CF Toronto Eaton Centre, Scarborough Town Centre and Vaughan Mills stores open after today’s announcement. Insiders are already saying that it’s likely that these three locations will also be confirmed to close by mid-August.

Given the extended lockdowns in Ontario for mall-based retailers that ended recently, Ontario Disney store closure announcements were said to be delayed so that the retailer has the opportunity to hold clearance sales while at the same time bringing back ‘cast members’ to work in stores prior to their termination. Shopping centres in Ontario were permitted to reopen in the province on June 30.

Retail Insider was informed by multiple sources in April of this year that all Disney stores would be shutting in Canada, one of which was a major landlord not permitted to speak on the record.

Retail Insider made the initial store closing announcement in April partly to give employees time to attempt to secure alternative employment, noting that Disney typically makes such announcements shortly before stores actually shutter. After our report in April, we were informed that several retailers were reaching out to Disney employees who are considered to be highly desirable employees because of their personalities and training. Prior to publishing this article on Friday, Retail Insider notified several retailers that they should immediately target Disney employees to hire in the 10 stores confirmed to be closing in Canada as part of the next round.

Disney Store Canada Mickey
Disney Store Canada Mickey. Photo: Dustin Fuhs

One of the current Disney ‘cast members’ interviewed by Retail Insider said that they had come to the acceptance that Disney was exiting its Canadian store operations after Retail Insider announced it in April. Some employees have already secured new jobs since then and are working at the Disney stores until they close in order to take advantage of severance moneys. Several cast members reached out to Retail Insider to thank us for giving them the heads up that a search for a new job would be a necessity.

On Wednesday of this week, Disney shut more stores in the United States in addition to last days of the BC stores. Disney is said to be re-evaluating its operations amid a challenging time for retail as consumer shopping patterns shift to online channels. On March 3, Disney announced that it was planning on focusing on its e–commerce business while at the same time reducing its brick-and-mortar footprint. 

Initially, a total of 60 North American locations were announced to close including the Square One (Mississauga) and CrossIron Mills (Calgary area) locations in Canada.

Disney Store Yorkdale. Photo: Dustin Fuhs

Earlier this year, mall landlords in Canada were said to have been working with Disney on an exit strategy which involved Disney paying out the remaining duration for its Canadian leases which in some cases had a duration of several years. This would allow the company to bypass any potential litigation — a situation which happened in 2017 when Cadillac Fairview sued Starbucks after the coffee company shut its Teavana storefronts.

Disney never launched e-commerce in Canada, nor did it secure warehouse space for product fulfillment in terms of ship-to-store or otherwise. If consumers ordered online from the company’s global website, taxes and duties would be charged. One source noted that several of the Canadian Disney store units, including the CF Toronto Eaton Centre and West Edmonton Mall locations, were among the company’s top-selling stores. 

The Walt Disney Company reacquired the Disney Store business from Children’s Place Retail Stores Inc. in 2008, with 231 locations being purchased in Canada and the United States. Operating under the Disney Consumer Products division of the company until 2018, the stores were merged under a new division called Parks, Experiences and Consumer Products, which was previously under the leadership of Bob Chapek. Mr. Chapek was named the Chief Executive Officer of The Walt Disney Company in February 2020 and subsequently named Josh D’Amaro as his successor as the Chairman of Disney Parks, Experiences and Products.

We’ll follow up on this story when we are able to confirm more details from official channels on Disney’s exit from Canada.

Zara Unveils Bigger and Bolder Flagship Storefront at Metropolis at Metrotown in Burnaby BC

Zara re-opening on July 23, 2021 at Metropolis at Metrotown.
Zara re-opening on July 23, 2021 at Metropolis at Metrotown. Photo: Geetanjali Sharma.

Fast-fashion retailer Zara has opened its new flagship location at Metropolis at Metrotown in Burnaby, BC. The company is headquartered in Spain and has approximately 2,270 stores worldwide specializing clothing, accessories, shoes, swimwear, beauty, and fragrances.

The Metrotown website proclaimed “Zara re-opens Friday, July 23, 2021 with its newest concept for Zara stores around the world, as well as the most technologically advanced store in Canada! In the meantime, follow @zara for the latest fashion styles and trends”.

The re-opening reveals the retailer operating out of the upper level in the south-west corner of the Metropolis shopping centre in 38,499 square feet of retail space. Construction hoarding was erected in November 2020 to begin the expansion, growing from its original 18,000 square feet in another part of the mall.

Metrotown shopping centre owner, Ivanhoe Cambridge, supported the renovation by committing mall corridor space to Zara’s expansion as well as adding neighbouring retail stores to make up the extra square footage. This becomes one of the largest Zara stores in North America at 38,499 square feet.

Zara location at Metropolis at Metrotown
Zara location at Metropolis at Metrotown. Map: Metrotown website.
Interior of new Zara on reopening at Metropolis at Metrotown on July 23, 2021
Interior of new Zara at Metropolis at Metrotown on July 23, 2021. Photo: Geetanjali Sharma.

While onsite, Zara staff members said that customers will have the ability to self-checkout their own purchases or have the option for home delivery. At the time of the grand re-opening, these features and services were not yet operational.

Self checkout stations at Zara reopening at Metrotown Mall (July 23, 2021)
Self checkout stations which were not yet operational at Zara reopening at Metrotown Mall (July 23, 2021). Photo: Geetanjali Sharma.

Metropolis at Metrotown website (July 23, 2021) announcing Zara reopening.
Metropolis at Metrotown website (July 23, 2021) announcing Zara reopening.

This brings back Zara to Metropolis at Metrotown which had been absent for shoppers while the renovation was underway since late 2020.

The following are social media promotions for the reopening as well as the construction progress photos taken by Retail Insider over the past months leading up to the re-opening.

Metrotown Instagram (July 23, 2021) announcing Zara reopening.

Zara’s parent company, Inditex, is also headquartered in Spain and has other clothing brands including Massimo Dutti.

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web For July 23nd, 2021

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web

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Couche-Tard Likely to Become a Grocery Retailer in Canada and it Would Disrupt Loblaw and Other Big Players: Interviews

Exterior of Couche-Tard store. Photo: Couche-Tard
Exterior of Couche-Tard store. Photo: Couche-Tard

Canadian convenience store giant Couche-Tard was not successful earlier this year in acquiring international food retailer Carrefour SA but one expert believes it will eventually enter in some way into the growing food retail market.

Sylvain Charlebois
Sylvain Charlebois

Sylvain Charlebois, Professor, Director, Agri-Food Analytics Lab and Former Dean of the Faculty of Management, Dalhousie University, said it was no coincidence that Couche-Tard was trying to buy Carrefour earlier in the year.

“In fact, Carrefour is the seventh largest grocer in the world. It’s actually larger than Loblaw. I think it took a lot of people by surprise to see Couche-Tard’s appetite to become a grocer essentially. I certainly wasn’t surprised because you have to look at the writing on the wall for Couche-Tard. They’ve been masterful in converting gas dollars into food dollars by getting people into their stores and buying some premium products,” said Charlebois.

“But if people don’t gas anymore, in a decade or two how do you actually generate more growth? And they are very good at food retailing. A lot of food products that you find at a Couche-Tard or a Couche-Tard owned and operated store some of these products are of high quality. So it’s not just necessarily a convenience store chain. I have to say that Couche-Tard is a very good food distributor as well. As much as anybody else in the game in Canada.”

Charlebois said the company in the future will likely become a grocer.

There is a trend these days for consumers looking at smaller format grocery stores for the convenience and ease of shopping. This would benefit Couche-Tard if it were to enter that market.

“With telecommuting and people working from home a lot more often, I think it’s going to be one of COVID’s major legacies to actually get people to work from home more often whether it’s on a part-time or full-time basis, it’s a reality. The real estate market has been affected by this and people have made long-term commitments to where they actually live and where they’ll be working,” said Charlebois.

“So the food network, or food retailing, will be impacted by where people live. If you actually spend a lot of time close to your kitchen, it will make you a cook more often. You’ll eat different products. You’ll probably be focused more on retailing and meal kits. And so as a convenience store operator you have to think about that too. Convenience stores are actually very accessible for people working in suburbs or in smaller communities.

“I know of a few startups that have started to look at using convenience stores as outlets for meal kits. So you can see there could be an ecosystem that would be built around convenience stores as a result of seeing more people working from home.”

And Couche-Tard has locations well situated for that because of the real estate they own.

“And they’re not very big. You can go in and out very quickly. If people are working from home and they have maybe half an hour between meetings, they can actually go in their cars, pick up whatever they need and come back home,” added Charlebois. “Very convenient. Very practical for a lot of people.”

He said Couche-Tard definitely has the capital to become a grocer.

Brian Hannasch, President and Chief Executive Officer at Alimentation Couche-Tard (Circle K)
Brian Hannasch, President and Chief Executive Officer at Alimentation Couche-Tard (Circle K). Photo: LinkedIn.

“I think the conversation is happening right now. I think a lot of people will see Couche-Tard as a potential buyer of a grocer in Canada. I don’t know which one. It’s hard to speculate but if you ask me whether or not it is more likely to see Couche-Tard become a grocer versus a new entrant in the market, I would probably vote for Couche-Tard. I think Couche-Tard has a better chance of becoming a grocer than seeing new players in the Canadian market.”

In mid January, Couche-Tard and Carrefour announced that preliminary discussions around a transaction were no longer continuing.

But Carrefour and Couche-Tard, however, also announced they decided to extend their discussions to examine opportunities for operational partnerships. Among the preliminary areas of cooperation to be explored are sharing best practices on fuel, pooling purchasing volumes, partnering on private labels, improving the customer journey through innovation, and evaluating ways of optimizing product distribution in the overlapping networks.

“The opportunity for operational partnerships with Carrefour will further our journey towards becoming a leading global retailer. The discussed areas for cooperation align with our five-year strategic plan, as well as our commitment to strengthening our core convenience and fuel business and pursuing opportunities in multiple, related growth platforms,” said Brian Hannasch, President and CEO, Couche-Tard.

“Building innovative partnerships is a key part of Carrefour’s transformation strategy. The promising partnerships anticipated with North American leader Couche-Tard is fully aligned with this strategy, which has enabled us to return to a profitable growth path,” said Alexandre Bompard, Chairman and CEO, Carrefour.

Couche-Tard is the leader in the Canadian convenience store industry, with a market cap of approximately C$46 billion as at January 12, 2021. As of October 11, 2020, Couche-Tard’s network comprised 9,261 convenience stores throughout North America, including 8,085 stores with road transportation fuel dispensing.

With a multi-format network of some 12,300 stores in more than 30 countries, the Carrefour Group is one of the world’s leading food retailers. Carrefour recorded gross sales of €80.7 billion in 2019.

Bay Signage Removed from Hudson’s Bay Centre Tower at Iconic Downtown Toronto Intersection

Image: Brookfield Properties

The former Bay branding on the tower connected to the Hudson’s Bay Centre in downtown Toronto has been removed after almost 50 years. The logo at one time was a beacon for the Hudson’s Bay flagship store that opened on the site in 1974. 

The Hudson’s Bay Centre replaced several smaller buildings at the northeast corner of Yonge and Bloor Streets and became an anchor for the rapidly developing area. The 340,000 square foot Hudson’s Bay department store became the company’s flagship upon completion, taking the title away from the massive downtown Winnipeg flagship Bay store (which shuttered permanently several months ago). 

The Yonge and Bloor Bay store lost its status as the company’s flagship in 1991 when the Hudson’s Bay Company converted the massive Simpsons department store at the southwest corner of Queen Street and Yonge to the Hudson’s Bay banner. The Hudson’s Bay Company acquired the Simpsons chain in 1978 which coincided with the decommissioning of the Simpsons-Sears store banners. 

Hudson’s Bay Centre at 2 Bloor Street East in Toronto (July 2021). Photo: Craig Patterson
Signage has been removed from the tower at 2 Bloor Street East (July 2021). Photo: Craig Patterson
Ad from the opening of the Bay store at Yonge & Bloor in Toronto. Image from Toronto Sun, August 7, 1974.

The Hudson’s Bay Centre connects to the subway interchange below with a mall retail component spanning 213,000 square feet according to landlord Brookfield Properties. Tenants include The Bay department store as well as a Longo’s grocery store, Dollarama, LCBO, and tenants in the concourse-level mall and a food court. The 35-storey office tower above it spans 535,000 square feet and was designed by architect Craig & Boake. The centre also includes a soon-to-open W Hotel which is currently under construction — it replaces a Marriott Hotel that operated on the site for years with a rental apartment building located directly above it. 

When it was built, the 2 Bloor East office tower housed offices for the Hudson’s Bay Company and with Workmen’s Compensation Board — both tenants were announced in 1971 before the tower’s completion. 

The Urban Toronto forum recently included conversations that the Hudson’s Bay store at the Hudson’s Bay Centre would be closing. Retail Insider reached out to the Hudson’s Bay Company who denied that the rumours are true.

3rd floor of the Hudson’s Bay store at Yonge and Bloor showing a reduced retail footprint (July 2021). Photo: Craig Patterson

The Hudson’s Bay store has recently seen a size reduction on some floors already and departments being downsized. The photo above shows the third-level women’s floor which lost several thousand square feet with walls covering former retail space leading to a set of washrooms.