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Choice primarily owns Canadian retail properties anchored by its Loblaw Company stores. [2] It also owns other commercial properties. As of the end of December 2017, the company owned 546 properties, with a gross leasable area of 44.1 million square feet, and a total value of $9.6 billion.
Commercial property includes office buildings, medical centers, hotels, malls, retail stores, multifamily housing buildings, farm land, warehouses, and garages. In many U.S. states, residential property containing more than a certain number of units qualifies as commercial property for borrowing and tax purposes.
Starlight Investments is a privately-held Canadian real estate investment and asset management company based in Toronto, Ontario.As of 2024, Starlight owns 70,000 multi-family units (54,000 in Canada [1] and 10,000 in the United States), 8 million square feet of commercial space, and over 600 properties across Canada. [2]
Little Germany is still one of Bradford's busiest commercial areas, with over 110 businesses and organisations with 3,000 workers. It attracts around 100,000 visitors each year. [ 8 ] The local authority is currently promoting plans to regenerate the area by renovating and converting the interior of the old buildings into housing, hotels ...
The street was first developed by William Hey II as Bond Street in 1823–1824, and was renamed to Commercial Street several years later. [2] Leeds Library, the oldest surviving subscription library in the UK, is located on this street. [3] [4]
David Russell [24] calculates that in Victorian Bradford there was 1 "pub" (public houses, dram shops and beer shops) per 200 of population. The number of licensed premises in Bradford reached a peak of 1,219 in 1882 (1 per 152 of population) and had fallen to 926 in 1894 (1 per 205 of population).
In 1884, it was amalgamated with the Toronto Corn Exchange Association. The Old Toronto Board of Trade Building (1892–1958), which housed the board, was Toronto's first skyscraper at seven storeys. In 1932−33, the board's name was officially changed to "The Board of Trade of Metropolitan Toronto".
Commerce Court is a commercial complex made up of four structures, and a central courtyard. The complex is bounded by several major roadways, including Bay Street to the west, King Street West to the north, Yonge Street along its southeastern periphery, and Wellington Street West to the south.