Carrefour Angrignon

Shopping mall in Montreal, Quebec
45°26′52.1″N 73°36′51.2″W / 45.447806°N 73.614222°W / 45.447806; -73.614222Opening dateAugust 13, 1986ManagementWestcliff Management Ltd.OwnerWestcliff, Montez Core Income FundNo. of stores and services150+No. of anchor tenants5Total retail floor area785,815 square feet (73,000 m2) (GLA)No. of floors1ParkingOutdoorPublic transit access Angrignon station
Bus transport Terminus Angrignon
WebsiteOfficial website

Carrefour Angrignon is a shopping centre in the Montreal borough of LaSalle, Quebec, Canada. Popular stores include Hudson's Bay, Staples, Best Buy, Maxi and Famous Players. There is also a food court. Built in 1986, it is located on Newman Boulevard, at the intersection with Angrignon Boulevard.

History

Carrefour Angrignon opened in August 1986 with 200 stores and anchors from its debut were Sears, Zellers, Maxi, Eaton's and Pascal's.[1][2]

The Pascal's hardware chain went bankrupt in 1991.[3] The mall underwent changes in 1991, as the former Pascal's store became a car lot for a one-year period (Rallye Honda Lasalle) prior to being split in two to become a movie theatre. Cine Entreprise built the theatre before Cine Entreprise was itself sold to Famous Players. By 1995, Famous Players and Future Shop occupied the former Cine Entreprise space. After a succession of ownership changes, the movie theatre is now owned by Cineplex.

Eaton's closed on February 28, 1998.[4] Eaton's former space is occupied by Staples, Sports Experts/Atmosphere and Economax.

Future Shop moved to a new standalone location in 2004; it was demolished and rebuilt as a Best Buy store. Fortune Cinemas replaced the Famous Players location in 2006, only to be repurchased by Cineplex a few years later.

The Cumberland Drugs chain, which replaced Kanes Super Drug Mart in 1990, became an Essaim in 1997, changing to the current Pharmaprix by 2005.

Target was assuming the lease of the Zellers store on November 13, 2013.[5] Target was closed in 2015.[6]

Sears permanently closed on January 14, 2018.[7] This leaves Maxi as the last anchor from 1986.[1] The 50% interest in the mall that was owned by Sears Canada was acquired by Montez Corporation.[8]

Hudson's Bay replaced the former Target store on August 24, 2018.[9][6]

Sears's former location was subdivided in 2019 by L'Aubainerie and Ardene.[10][11]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Carrefour Angrignon promo section". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. August 20, 1986. p. F2.
  2. ^ "Carrefour Angrignon promo page". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. August 9, 1986. p. J10.
  3. ^ "Stranded Pascal staff seek severance, vacation pay". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. May 28, 1991. p. A4.
  4. ^ "Eaton's advertisement". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. February 18, 1998. p. A9.
  5. ^ "Target Confirms Store Locations Opening in 2013". Canada Newswire. Retrieved October 22, 2012.
  6. ^ a b "Hudson's Bay Opens First New Store in Canada in 15 Years [Photos/Analysis]". 28 August 2018.
  7. ^ Wright, Lisa (12 January 2018). "Final Sears stores close Sunday, marking the end of an era | The Star". The Toronto Star.
  8. ^ https://www.lexpert.ca/big-deals/montez-acquires-sears-interest-in-quebec-portfolio/347954
  9. ^ "Hudson's Bay Company opens LaSalle store | Montreal Gazette". August 24, 2018.
  10. ^ "Store Map Carrefour Angrignon (2018)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 January 2018.
  11. ^ "Store Map Carrefour Angrignon (2019)". July 6, 2019. Archived from the original on 6 July 2019.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carrefour Angrignon.
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