Place Rosemère
Location | Rosemère, Quebec, Canada |
---|---|
Coordinates | 45°38′N 73°49′W / 45.63°N 73.82°W |
Address | 401, boulevard Curé-Labelle |
Opening date | August 13, 1975 |
Management | Morguard Investments |
No. of stores and services | 200 |
No. of anchor tenants | 3 |
Total retail floor area | approx. 890,715 sq ft (82,750.1 m2) |
No. of floors | 1 (2 in Hudson's Bay) |
Website | placerosemere |
Place Rosemère is a super regional mall in Rosemère, Quebec, Canada. It is near the intersection of Quebec Autoroute 640 and Quebec Autoroute 15.[1] Its anchor stores are Walmart, La Baie and Best Buy. It has 200 stores, including a food court of thirteen restaurants.[2] Place Rosemère is operated by Morguard Investments.[3]
Place Rosemère began modestly when it first opened in 1975 with approximately 70 stores, anchored by Woolco, Beaver Lumber and Dominion.[4][5][6][7] The Hudson's Bay Company had originally confirmed a La Baie store for the mall's inauguration,[5] but nothing ever came out of this announcement and it's only 16 years later, on March 13, 1991, that it opened at Place Rosemère.[8]
Dominion was acquired by Provigo in 1981[9] and Woolco by Wal-Mart in 1994.[10]
A first expansion, opened in 1991, relocated the Canadian Tire store into the new section, along with the newly opened La Baie store.[11] This expansion brought the mall to 150 stores.[11] Another expansion, opened in 2002, brought the mall to its current size and layout as Wal-Mart moved to a new location in the mall's expansion and a new Sears store moved to the old Wal-Mart store.[11] This expansion coincided with the closing of two other anchor stores when Canadian Tire moved to a standalone location across the street and Provigo, one of the last supermarkets to be located in a Canadian regional mall, closed its doors. Some smaller stores took the place of the old Canadian Tire store, and Zara, Pharmaprix and Dormez-Vous took the place of the old Provigo store.
In 2008, the Best Buy store was built at the north end of the mall, next to Walmart.[12] On January 8, 2018, Sears closed its doors.[13]
See also
References
- ^ https://www.ledevoir.com/economie/91341/sur-l-ancien-terrain-de-gm-le-projet-du-faubourg-boisbriand-se-precise
- ^ "Place Rosemère". Archived from the original on 2007-12-03. Retrieved 2007-12-18.
- ^ https://monjournal.ca/basseslaurentides/sears-de-nombreuses-pertes-demplois-a-rosemere/
- ^ "Nouveau centre d'achats". Progrès-Dimanche. Chicoutimi. 15 June 1975. p. 34-B.
- ^ a b "La Baie ira à Rosemère". La Presse. Montreal. 11 June 1975. p. B3.
- ^ "Woolco advertisement page". La Presse. Montreal. 9 August 1975. p. A12.
- ^ "Dominion advertisement". La Presse. Montreal. 12 August 1975. p. E1.
- ^ "La Baie advertisement". La Presse. Montreal. 9 March 1991. p. F8.
- ^ "Provigo advertising page". The Record. 3 August 1981. p. 12.
- ^ "Wal_Mart fait trembler la concurrence mais saliver les consommateurs". La Presse. 18 January 1994. p. C10.
- ^ a b c "Place Rosemère s'agrandit au coût de 50 millions". La Presse. Montreal. 13 September 2001. p. D11.
- ^ https://www.newswire.ca/fr/news-releases/best-buy-celebre-louverture-du-magasin-de-rosemere-spectacle-gratuit-de-garou-536810271.html
- ^ https://www.tvanouvelles.ca/2018/01/08/fermeture-des-premiers-magasins-sears