Fairview Mall
Coordinates: 43°46′40″N 79°20′40″W / 43.77778°N 79.34444°W
Location |
1800 Sheppard Avenue East Toronto, Ontario, Canada M2J 5A7 |
---|---|
Opening date | 1970 |
Developer | Fairview Corp. of Canada Ltd |
Management | Cadillac Fairview |
Owner | Cadillac Fairview & Ivanhoe Cambridge |
No. of stores and services | 170 |
No. of anchor tenants | 3 |
Total retail floor area | 881,287 ft² (81,874 m²) |
No. of floors | 2 retail levels, plus 1 office and cinema level |
Public transit access | Don Mills |
Website | Fairview Mall |
Fairview Mall (corporately known as CF Fairview Mall)[1] is a major shopping centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada of about 80,000 m2 (860,000 sq ft). Opened in 1970, the centre has over 170 stores and services, including The Bay, Sears Canada, offices and a cinema complex. It is located several kilometres north-east of downtown, at the northeast corner of Don Mills Road and Sheppard Avenue East in the former borough of North York.
History
Fairview Mall was opened in 1970 with The Bay and Simpson's as its department store anchors, and at the time was the fourth fully enclosed, as well as the first multi-level shopping centre in Metropolitan Toronto. In 1978 the Hudson's Bay Company (parent company of The Bay) purchased the Simpson's retail chain, and subsequently sold its Simpson's store at Fairview Mall to Sears Canada in 1991 (along with five others that were co-located with Bay stores). Sears Canada then converted Fairview's Simpson's into a Sears retail store.
Redevelopments
From 1987 to 1989 the Cadillac Fairview Corporation and previous co-owner Markborough Properties Ltd spent CAD$90M to provide Fairview Mall's first major expansion. Renovations at that time included a glass-tiered ceiling, similar to Toronto's Eaton Centre, which opened much of its interior to natural lighting.[2]
In late 2008 Fairview Mall completed a CAD$90 million (previously planned as $84 million) three-phase full renovation and redevelopment project which had been started in July 2006. The redevelopment phases included an expanded Shoppers Drug Mart and a large format Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) store. The food court was moved to the lower level under a 60-foot (18 m) high skylight near The Bay. All entrances to the mall were updated to incorporate hands-free technology and the common areas inside the centre were transformed with greater open spaces and wood finishes. Elevators serving the third floor offices were added for the first time, located near entrance #4. The front facade along Sheppard Avenue was also received a complete facelift by Fall 2009, including Fairview Mall's new "dining experience" area.
In 2009, new stores such as Sephora, Hollister, Zara, Forever 21, and Bath & Body Works opened within the centre. The Rainbow Cinema was replaced by a new Cineplex SilverCity theatre.[3] The Rainbow Cinema had originally been an older style Cineplex theatre.
As of 2015, it is jointly owned by Cadillac Fairview (50%) and Ivanhoe Cambridge (50%),[4] two of Canada's largest real estate property managers and developers. Cadillac Fairview Corporation also owns and operates Fairview Park Mall in Kitchener, Ontario, and co-owns Fairview Pointe-Claire (Centre Fairview Centre) with Ivanhoe Cambridge, in Pointe-Claire, Quebec.
Retailers
Stores include (by size): The Bay, Sears Canada, Laura, Shopper's Drug Mart, Forever 21, Canada's first H&M retail location, Urban Planet, Sephora, Zara, Guess, Aritzia and Pandora. The shopping centre also provides a personal style program that offers clients individual image consultations, personal shopping sessions, and other customized services for a fee.[5]
Anchors and major stores
- Hudson's Bay 152,420 sq ft (14,160 m2)
- Sears 149,552 sq ft (13,893.8 m2)
- H & M 17,186 sq ft (1,596.6 m2)
- Shoppers Drug Mart 11,950 sq ft (1,110 m2)
- Laura 13,173 sq ft (1,223.8 m2) in total, including: Laura Petites -5,439 sq ft (505.3 m2), Laura -3,971 sq ft (368.9 m2) and Laura Plus -3,763 sq ft (349.6 m2)
Restaurants
Fairview Mall has a few restaurants connected to the back of the mall: Moxie's Classic Grill, St. Louis Bar & Grill, and Spring Rolls. There's also 2 branches of the 2 main Coffee shops in Toronto which are Tim Hortons.[6] and Starbucks.[7] and they are both located at the food court.
Other uses
The Toronto Public Library's Fairview Public Library branch is located to the north of the mall. There is a community health centre located next to the mall. It includes a pharmacy, various doctors offices and dentist offices, and eye exam clinics.
Transportation access
Fairview Mall is located near the intersections of two major arteries: Highways 401 and 404. The mall is surrounded on all sides by parking lot and parking garages. Parking is free. The shopping centre is also served by a Toronto Transit Commission subway line and a York Region bus rapid transit line.
In the early 2000s a major portion of the shopping centre's parking lot was redeveloped into a large bus terminal as part of the Toronto Transit Commission's (TTC's) Don Mills subway station (the eastern terminus of Toronto's new Sheppard subway line), and also as the southern terminus of York Region Transit's Viva Green bus rapid transit line. Many TTC local and express bus routes deploy from or pass through this terminal station, including express buses from nearby Scarborough.
See also
References
- ↑ "Cadillac Fairview to rename Eaton Centre, other Canadian shopping centres". Retrieved 2016-09-13.
- ↑ Brennan, Pat, (1986) Fairview Mall to get major expansion, Toronto Star, 27 August 1986, pg.E3 (subscription);
- ↑ Stores: Closed or Temporarily Relocated Stores, Fairview Mall website, retrieved 2008-06-29;
- ↑ Ivanhoe Cambridge corporate website
- ↑ The New York Times Travel Guide, New York Times online, retrieved 2009-04-14;
- ↑ Link text, additional text.
- ↑ Link text, additional text.
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