Cloverdale Mall
Coordinates | 43°37′53″N 79°33′18″W / 43.63139°N 79.55500°W |
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Address | 250 The East Mall Toronto, Ontario M9B 3Y8 |
Opening date | 1956 |
Developer | Bentall Kennedy |
Management | QuadReal Property Group |
Owner | QuadReal Property Group |
No. of stores and services | less than 80 |
No. of anchor tenants | 4 |
Total retail floor area | 46,000 m2 (500,000 sq ft) |
No. of floors | 1 |
Website | cloverdalemall |
Cloverdale Mall is a community shopping centre located in the Etobicoke district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, at 250 The East Mall northeast of the intersection of Dundas Street West and Highway 427). It opened in 1956 as an open-air shopping plaza on what was part of the Eatonville farm.
History
[edit]On November 15, 1956, Cloverdale Mall opened with 34 stores such as Dominion, S.S Kresge, Laura Secord Chocolates, Tip Top Tailors, United Cigar Stores as well as the Bank of Nova Scotia and Canadian Bank of Commerce.[1] The centre of the plaza was an open-air concrete courtyard. A Morgan's anchor store of two floors joined in August 1960 as part of an expansion of the shopping centre.[2] In the 1960s, following the purchase of Morgan's by the Hudson's Bay Company, the Morgan's store was converted into The Bay. In the 1980s, Cloverdale Mall was converted into an enclosed mall and expanded.
In 2005, Hudson's Bay Company replaced The Bay department store with their discount store Zellers at the mall's north end. Zellers expanded the lower/main level retail floor space but did not continue using the upper level of the Bay's former space, and it has been closed ever since. Winners and Kitchen Stuff Plus opened where the old Zellers outlet was at the mall's southern end. The mall underwent major renovations in 2006. In late 2008, the Dominion store was rebranded as Metro.
In September 2012, the Zellers store closed as its lease was sold to Target. Target opened on the bottom floor of the old store in March 2013.[3] On January 15, 2015, Target announced it was withdrawing from the Canadian market and all its stores would be closed within 4–5 months. The Cloverdale store remained vacant until February 2024, when Fairgrounds Public Racket Club opened a pickleball court in the former Target space.[4]
QuadReal, the property owner, has proposed replacing the existing mall with a mixed-use development covering 32 acres, while retaining the Cloverdale Mall name. QuadReal plans to submit the rezoning application in March 2020.[5]
In February 2021, it was announced a site at the mall is being prepared as a large-scale clinic for distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Cloverdale Mall opening advertisement". Globe and Mail. Toronto. 15 November 1956. p. 9.
- ^ "Morgan's opens largest Ontario branch". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. 17 August 1960. p. 14. Archived from the original on 14 October 2023. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
- ^ ""Target Confirms Store Locations Opening in 2013"". Target Corporation. Archived from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
- ^ "How Target botched a $7-billion rollout". January 15, 2015. Archived from the original on October 15, 2023. Retrieved May 7, 2024 – via www.theglobeandmail.com.
- ^ "One of Toronto's oldest malls is getting torn down for something completely different". Archived from the original on 2019-12-22. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
- ^ "City of Toronto to open 9 COVID-19 vaccine clinics to administer shots - Toronto | Globalnews.ca". Archived from the original on 2021-02-22. Retrieved 2021-02-23.
Pickleball, anyone? Mixed-use development includes courts to attract shoppers, office workers