Galeries d'Anjou

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Galeries d'Anjou
File:Galeries d Anjou 2.jpg
Location Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Address 7999, boulevard Galeries d'Anjou
Opening date August 8, 1968
Developer Cemp Investments
Management Ivanhoé Cambridge
Owner Ivanhoé Cambridge
No. of stores and services 160
No. of anchor tenants 6
Total retail floor area 1,114,000 sq ft (103,500 m2).
No. of floors 1
Parking 6000
Public transit access Autobusmontréal.svg STM Bus 44, 95, 141 and 460
Website lesgaleriesdanjou.ca

Galeries d'Anjou (formerly "CF Galeries d'Anjou") is a shopping mall located in the borough of Anjou in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Major tenants include Hudson's Bay, Simons, The Brick, Saks Off 5th, Winners and Sports Experts/Atmosphere. In addition to the main indoor shopping centre, Galeries d'Anjou has several stores around its parking lot including Best Buy and Rona l'Entrepôt.

Formerly owned by Cadillac Fairview, the mall had long been associated with the company's other shopping centres in the area Fairview Pointe-Claire, Carrefour Laval and Promenades Saint-Bruno.[1][2] It is now wholly-owned and operated by Ivanhoé Cambridge. It constitutes, along with rival Place Versailles, the super-regional malls in eastern Montreal. Galeries d'Anjou is currently over 1,100,000 square feet (100,000 m2) and was by far the largest shopping mall on the Island of Montreal throughout the 1970s and much of the 1980s.

History

File:WTMTL T10 DSC0084.JPG
The Bay prior to being renamed Hudson's Bay
File:WTMTL T24 DSC6589.JPG
Former Zellers store which had kept Eaton's facade.

In 1967, the part of Radisson Street in Anjou was renamed Galeries d'Anjou Boulevard in honor of the upcoming shopping mall.

Galeries d'Anjou opened in 1968 with 85 stores.[3] Its original anchors were the department stores Simpsons and Eaton's, and the supermarkets Steinberg's and Dominion.[3] Simpsons and Eaton's were located at the extremities of the mall, with store dimensions of 180,000 and 150,000 square feet respectively.[3] Simpsons always had three levels but only its first and second floors were used to sell merchandise (its basement was at the time reserved for store services and an employees' cafeteria).[4] Steinberg's and Dominion faced each another in the middle of the mall and were separated from one another by a corridor.[3] Upon its opening, Galeries d'Anjou was the second largest shopping mall in Canada after Yorkdale in Toronto.[5] At the time, the mall was the joint property of Simpsons Limited and Cemp Investments, and managed by Fairview Corporation.[3] It is the second shopping centre in the Montreal area developed and owned by the duo of Simpsons and Cemp Investments.[6]

In 1975, then manager and co-owner Cadillac Fairview announced the expansion of Galeries d'Anjou to bring the total size of the shopping centre from 700,000 to 920,000 square feet.[7] As a result, 65 new stores opened on March 25, 1976, in a new mall wing.[8][7] This new section was anchored a few months later by Sears which inaugurated in August 1976.[9][8]

Dominion rebranded as Provigo in 1981.[10] Steinberg's outlived its rival Provigo by three years in the mall until the chain's demise in 1992.[11][12] Ironically, Steinberg's was itself rebranded as a Provigo for a brief time in 1992 before being converted into a Maxi supermarket later in the year.[13][14]

In 1979, Hudson's Bay Company acquired the Simpsons chain which it kept as a subsidiary.[15] In 1984, Hudson's Bay Company transferred to its real-estate unit Markborough Properties the shopping malls that were owned by Simpsons.[16] Galeries d'Anjou was therefore the joint property of Cadillac Fairview and Markborough.[17] Simpsons continued operating its store in the mall until it converted to The Bay in March 1989.[18] The store's basement once served in the early 1990s as a warehouse for The Bay's bargains in Montreal, specifically on household products such as large appliances and home furnishings.[19]

Galeries d'Anjou underwent through a $18-million renovation in 1993.[17] The shopping centre did not increase size this time, but it added 30 new retail stores, a new food court in addition to making a series of interior upgrades to rejuvenate the 25 year old mall that had become outdated and was losing young customers to rival Place Versailles.[17]

In 1997, Cambridge Shopping Centres absorbed Markborough along with its ownership in shopping malls like Galeries d'Anjou.[20] Cambridge later merge with Ivanhoe Corporation in 2001 to form Ivanhoé Cambridge.[21]

Eaton's went out of business in 1999.[22] Hudson's Bay Company acquired its first floor for a new Zellers store that opened in Spring 2000.[23][24] The second floor of Eaton's was taken over by The Brick four years later on April 14, 2004.[25][24]

In August 2013, Galeries d'Anjou introduced a new section of 150,000 square feet featuring Simons and some 15 other retailers.[26][27] Simons itself was built on the mall's parking lot, while the small tenants took the site of the former food court that was demolished to accommodate the expansion.[28][29] The food court was relocated on the other side of the shopping centre near Zellers (later Target).[30]

Target acquired the lease of Zellers at Galeries d'Anjou, allowing it to open its own store on October 18, 2013.[31] After Target closed all its stores in Canada in April 2015, its space at Galeries d'Anjou was left vacant for two years. Winners, Saks Off 5th and Old Navy opened in 2017 in the former Target location.[32] Saks and Winners both opened on August 3, 2017, whereas Old Navy arrived two months later in October.[33][32] In spite of these major arrivals, a small space of the former Target store was still unoccupied.[32] It has since been filled by a Cacao 70 chocolatier shop and a Copper Branch restaurant, both of which are accessible only from outside.[34] Moreover, a Dollarama opened up on the second floor and appears to have taken the space of a downsizing The Brick.[35][28]

The Sears at Galeries d'Anjou was among the stores that closed during the chain's final day in Canada on January 14, 2018.[36]

On May 19, 2021, Ivanhoé Cambridge became the sole owner of the mall by acquiring Cadillac Fairview's share of Galeries d'Anjou in exchange for Ivanhoé Cambridge's share of Fairview Pointe-Claire.[37] Prior to this, the two shopping centres were co-owned by Ivanhoé Cambridge and Cadillac Fairview, with the latter serving as manager of both malls.[38][39]

It is expected that with the Blue line extension into Anjou the future metro station will connect underground to the mall through a pedestrian tunnel.[40]

The Aubainerie store opened at the Former Sears in 2022.

See also

References

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External links

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