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Fairview Pointe-Claire (corporately styled as "CF Fairview Pointe-Claire") is the largest shopping mall in the West Island and one of the biggest on the Island of Montreal. It is located in the city of Pointe-Claire , Quebec , Canada, at the intersection of Trans-Canada Highway and Saint-Jean Boulevard.
Hudson's Bay, Simons, Avril, CF Marché des Promenades, Sports Experts/Atmosphere, Winners, Imaginaire, Zara, Bouclair Cadillac Fairview 1978 7 million [58] $600 [93] The Pen Centre, St. Catharines: Ontario 1,029,683 [94] 95,661 180 [95] [96] Hudson's Bay, Zehrs, Landmark Cinemas, Winners, HomeSense, Sport Chek, Walmart, Mark's Ontario Pension ...
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. [44] Prior to this, the two shopping centres were co-owned by Ivanhoé Cambridge and Cadillac Fairview, with the latter serving as manager of both ...
Winners logo from 1982 to 2005 Winners in Southcentre Mall, Calgary, Alberta, Canada Winners store in Bayers Lake Business Park with 1980s logo. Winners was founded in Toronto, Ontario in 1982 by David Margolis. [2] [3] It was one of the first off-price department stores in Canada. In 1990, it merged with off-price department store owner TJX ...
Fairview Pointe-Claire, a major regional mall in Pointe-Claire The city has a large business and industrial park spanning both sides of Quebec Autoroute 40 . The manufacturing sector is the largest provider of jobs in Pointe-Claire, with 7,005 employees or 23.7 percent of employment.
Fairview Pointe-Claire; Fairview–Pointe-Claire station; L. Lakeshore General Hospital; Lindsay Place High School; N. National Field of Honour; P. Pointe-Claire station;
NEW YORK (AP) — Claire Jiménez’s “What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez,” a hard-hitting and comic novel set in New York City about a Puerto Rican family's search for a missing girl, has won the ...
In 1982, Volunteer Capital was renamed Winners Corp. and by December there were 64 restaurants under the Mrs. Winner's umbrella. [4] In 1984 the chain boasted a total of 184 stores but by 1989 after four years of losses, the company decided to sell the franchise [ 5 ] to RTM Inc., Arby's largest franchisee, for about $30 million.