Cavendish Mall
Location |
5800 Cavendish Boulevard Côte Saint-Luc, Quebec, Canada |
---|---|
Opening date | August 1973 |
Management | Mandevco Properties Inc. |
No. of stores and services | 48 |
No. of anchor tenants | 2 (IGA, Cineplex cinema) |
Total retail floor area | 250,000 square feet (23,000 m2) |
No. of floors | 1 (excluding highrise building) |
Parking | Outdoor |
Website | www.QuartierCavendish.com |
The Cavendish Mall (also known as Quartier Cavendish) is an indoor shopping centre in Côte Saint-Luc, Quebec, Canada. It includes a food court, multiplex movie theater and a medical clinic: the CLSC Rene Cassin. A small highrise office-building is adjoined to the mall's southern half. Redeveloped in 2011, the mall was reduced to almost half its original size.
David Cronenberg's 1977 film Rabid features scenes shot in the mall.
History
The mall experienced declining patronage over the past decade due to an aging population and limited access by car because of the city's failure to extend Cavendish Boulevard. Another serious blow was the closing of its two main anchors: Eaton's and Canadian Tire.[1] Other notable closures included Caplan Duval, The Source, Gap, Consumers Distributing, Music World, Steinberg's, Miracle Mart, Staples and restaurants: Pumpernicks, Cattleman's and Katerina's. With the southern half of the mall vacant it had been considered a dead mall throughout the 2000s. In 2010, a large portion of the mall was demolished to make way for a new residential development.
Timeline
- 1973: Mall opens. Anchors are Eaton's, Warshaw's, Steinberg's & Miracle Mart
- 1978: Warshaws closes; becomes a Canadian Tire
- 1986: Miracle Mart closes; space divided to become Lupton Duval (later Caplan Duval) & Cineplex Odeon
- 1991: Opening of J&R Kosher Meat and Delicatessen.
- 1992: Steinberg's ceases operations; this store is taken over by IGA
- 1995: Firestone taken over by Pneus Expert.
- 1996: Consumers Distributing closes.
- 1997: Scotiabank acquires National Trust, although old National Trust signs remained until partial mall demolition.
- 1998: Eaton's closes; part of space becomes Superclub Videotron.
- 2005: Canadian Tire closes & RadioShack becomes The Source By Circuit City
- 2006: The Gap closes.
- 2007: Music World, Browns Shoes & The Source close. Dollarama opens in (part of) Canadian Tire space.
- 2009: Caplan Duval and Superclub Videotron close.
- 2010: 40% of the mall demolished to make way for residential housing development.
- 2011: Cavendish Mall rebranded as Quartier Cavendish.[2][3]
- 2015: Staples closes.
2016: Econofitness opens
Consolidation and revitalization
In August 2007 the owners announced a partial demolition to reduce the mall and consolidate its tenants. In August 2010 the remaining tenants were relocated to the north end of the mall. Demolition of the south end began October 2010.
In December 2010 demolition of 40% of mall was completed, effectively removing its southern end. The mall was reduced to 250,000 square feet (23,000 m2) of space (for let) with room for 55 stores and space for a small indoor children's play area. Previously the mall was approximately 400,000 square feet (37,161.2 m2). Extensive reconstruction was done in the old Caplan Duval site, where the CLSC Rene Cassin is now located. The former section of the demolished mall underwent construction of roads and sidewalks along with newly built townhouses and semi-detached homes. This included the sale of 39 lots for single-family homes.
See also
References
- ↑ Lampert, Allison (3 July 2010). "Cavendish mall: Seeking a retail renaissance". Montreal Gazette. Retrieved 3 July 2010.
- ↑ Cohen, Mike (27 November 2011). "Cavendish Mall/Quartier Cavendish". MikeCohen.ca. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
- ↑ Goldenberg, Joel (30 November 2011). "Cavendish Mall becoming Quartier Cavendish". The Suburban. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
External links
- Quartier Cavendish Official Website
- Cavendish Movie Theater
- "Cavendish Mall Plan Impractical", The Suburban (Cote St. Luc), 2008 June 11
- "Changes to the Cavendish Mall", The Gazette (Montreal), 2010 July 5
Coordinates: 45°28′33″N 73°39′55″W / 45.47583°N 73.66528°W