Advertisement
Advertisement

Saint Laurent Unveils Bloor Street Boutique

Date:

Share post:

Paris-based luxury brand Saint Laurent (formerly ‘Yves Saint Laurent’) has opened a street-level boutique on Toronto’s Bloor Street West ’Mink Mile’. The shop is technically a concession within the  Holt Renfrew complex at 50 Bloor Street West, though it functions as a standalone boutique and carries the company’s entire collections for men and women. 

The boutique features both a street-facing entrance onto Bloor Street, as well as access and a marble facade from within Holt Renfrew’s cosmetics department. Marble and metal are the themes throughout Saint Laurent’s new store — flooring and walls are primarily marble clad, and mirrors make the space appear even larger than it is. 

Unlike the Toronto Yorkdale Shopping Centre Saint Laurent that opened in November of 2016, the Bloor Street Saint Laurent is divided into separate areas that include menswear, women’s ready-to-wear, footwear and accessories. Handbags proliferate at the front of the store facing Bloor Street along with a selection of pricey women’s fashion from the Spring/Summer 2018 collection, and men’s is further to the back. 

[CLICK FOR INTERACTIVE GOOGLE MAP]
[ACCESSORY AREA IN THE FRONT OF THE STORE]

Saint Laurent is the latest renovated area of the 50 Bloor Street West Holt Renfrew store, which is seeing piecemeal renovations to selected departments. Sources in the company say that a bigger renovation is planned with details to follow. What’s interesting, as well, is that the Saint Laurent boutique at 50 Bloor carries menswear, and that it wasn’t included in the current standalone 16,500 square foot men’s store  at 100 Bloor Street West

The new Saint Laurent boutique actually takes part of the former men’s floor at the 50 Bloor Holt Renfrew store. All of the 50 Bloor menswear was moved to the 100 Bloor Street West men’s store last year. Holt Renfrew has been making changes to its 50 Bloor Street premises and last summer, it reduced the store’s size by about 3,800 square feet when it gave up ground level space that is technically part of the adjacent 60 Bloor Street West office tower. That space remains vacant. 

[WOMEN’S READY-TO-WEAR AT THE FRONT OF THE STORE]
[SAINT LAURENT OCCUPIES THE WEST SIDE OF HOLT’S GROUND FLOOR, BEING ON THE LEFT-HAND SIDE OF THIS PHOTO]
[THIS PHOTO WAS TAKEN FROM WITHIN HOLT RENFREW’S GROUND FLOOR COSMETICS HALL, SHOWING THE ENTRANCE TO THE NEW SAINT LAURENT. MEN’S SHOES CAN BE SEEN IN THE PHOTO]

In some respects, Holt Renfrew is taking a page from its past by offering Saint Laurent street-level space with its own entrance. In the 1990’s, Giorgio Armani had street-facing boutiques at Holt’s in Toronto and Montreal and more recently, Chanel opened a 5,000 square foot street-level concession at Holt Renfrew in Vancouver that faces onto Dunsmuir Street —  though it is only accessed from within Holt’s. 

Saint Laurent has expanded its presence in Canada over the past two years, having opened two boutiques, as well as an accessory concession at Nordstrom in Vancouver. Saint Laurent opened its first standalone store in Canada in Vancouver at 746 Thurlow Street in July of 2016, spanning 4,800 square feet over two floors. A second location at Toronto’s Yorkdale Shopping Centre, spanning more than 3,000 square feet on one level, opened in November of 2016

[WOMEN’S SHOES. PHOTO: DAVID IAN GRAY]
[LOOKING INTO THE STORE FROM HOLT’S COSMETICS DEPARTMENT. MEN’S READY-TO-WEAR IS AT THE BACK OF THE PHOTO]

The new Saint Laurent gives Bloor Street a luxury boost — the stretch near Holt’s is for the most part more mid-market, featuring locations for retailers such as The Gap, Aritzia and H&M. That will change towards the end of this year when an overhauled Birks jewellery store flagship will be unveiled, housing street-front entrances for pricey shop-in-stores including  Van Cleef & Arpels and Breitling.

Birks is part of the Manulife Centre complex which is undergoing a podium transformation that will add new retailers, including a 50,000 square foot three-level Eataly (opening in early 2019). Canadian footwear guru Ron White’s updated flagship at Manulife Centre was unveiled on Friday, and new retailers such as Over The Rainbow Jeans will open as the centre’s overhaul progresses. 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

More From Retail Insider

RECENT RETAIL INSIDER VIDEOS

Advertisment

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Subscribe

* indicates required

RECENT articles

From The Desk: Strategic Expansion and Evolving Consumer Engagement Define Retail in April 2026

Retail trends highlight acquisitions, cautious expansion, and experiential growth as brands navigate 2026 challenges and shifting consumer expectations.

Lunching with Lady Eaton Returns to Toronto May 17

Historic Eaton’s Round Room dining experience returns to Toronto on May 17, 2026, blending retail history with immersive hospitality.

No Name Launches ‘Grocery Goss’ Activations in Canada

Canadian value brand No Name has taken an unconventional approach to brand building with a new experiential campaign...

Reinvention and the Luxury Career Journey

How reinvention, adaptability and strategic pivots shape long-term success in the luxury retail career journey.

Reitmans reports Q4 and year-end results

Net loss was $4.9 million for the quarter and $0.9 million for the year.

FreshCo Expands East with First Atlantic Canada Locations

FreshCo enters Atlantic Canada with new Halifax-area stores, marking Empire’s first discount grocery expansion into the East Coast.

Righteous Gelato enters $900M frozen novelty category with national Sorbetto Bar launch across premium Canadian grocers

Having strong national distribution with partners like Loblaws, Sobeys, Metro, and Whole Foods allows it to scale quickly and ensure consumers can actually find the product when they’re excited to try it.

Pet Valu celebrating 50 years in business

The brand recently opened its 870th store in Canada. 

RUDSAK Expands into Europe and Asia Markets

RUDSAK expands into Europe and Asia through premium wholesale partnerships as the Montreal brand advances its global growth strategy.

Cake Beauty expands retail footprint in Canada with Walmart and Shoppers Drug Mart rollout

Cake started in 2003 out of the kitchen of the founder Heather Reier, who wanted to create some products that were “delicious, indulgent, but also clean.”

Angels Wear Preloved Launches Canada’s Largest Resale Event

Angels Wear Preloved launches Canada’s largest luxury resale event in Toronto, bringing 40+ consignment vendors together for one day.

Daily Synopsis: Apr 9, 2026

Roots reports financials, Ikea expanding, Empire acquires Quebec grocer, T&T Supermarket head discusses expansion, Costco opening in Thunder Bay, Indigenous-owned 'department store' shutting down, an dother news.

IKEA to Open London Store in Former Hudson’s Bay Space

IKEA will open a 43,000 sq. ft. store in London, Ontario, taking over former Hudson’s Bay space at White Oaks Mall.

Empire Acquires Mayrand, Enters Quebec Discount Grocery Market

Empire acquires Mayrand, gaining entry into Quebec’s discount and warehouse grocery market through a court-supervised sale process.

Reitmans unveils “bold new era” for Canadian fashion

In late April, Reitmans said it will unveil a new retail concept at Carrefour Laval, located approximately 20 kilometres from Montreal's downtown core.

Roots reports strong Q4 and Fiscal 2025 results

Sales in Fiscal 2025 were $277.7 million, a 5.6% increase compared to $262.9 million in F2024

Happy Belly Accelerates Expansion as U.S. Entry Nears

Happy Belly ramps up Canadian expansion and prepares for U.S. entry as profitability improves and new restaurant concepts gain traction.

MINISO Hello Kitty Pop-Up to Debut at Scarborough Town Centre

MINISO is launching Canada’s first Hello Kitty pop-up at Scarborough Town Centre, highlighting its IP-driven retail strategy.

Must Société opens flagship Jardin de Ville store in Laval (Photos)

Must Société is a leader in mid- to high-end indoor and outdoor furniture, with 16 stores across Québec and Ontario.

Gen Z Canadians reviving mall culture with focus on social shopping: Lightspeed Commerce

83% of Gen Z Canadians say stores with social or community features make them feel more connected, and more than half (52%) have chosen a retailer specifically for its third-space experience.