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Ma Maison Rona is a French Canadian reality television series based on New Zealand series Mitre 10 Dream Home, which debuted in 2004 on French language channel TVA. [28] The show was the French counterpart to Rona Dream Home. [29] The show has two families compete to build the best house for $100,000 over the course of 10 weeks.
In 2015, Rona announced that the brand would expand outside of Quebec with the re-opening of shuttered Rona locations in Calgary and Aurora, Ontario as Reno-Depot. [7] However, both locations were announced for closure in 2018 and 2019 respectively, leaving the chain once again restricted to Quebec.
Some of Rona's locations were converted to the Lowe's banner. In November 2022, Lowe's announced that it would sell its Canadian operations to Sycamore Partners for $400 million. Following the completion of the sale in 2023, Sycamore began to phase out the Lowe's brand in Canada, replacing it with the new Rona banner Rona+.
RONA. Réno-Dépôt; RONA+; PartSource; Peavey Mart out-of-business announced 01/27/25; Princess Auto; Red River Co-op; The Mufflerman; End of The Roll; Defunct home improvement and automotive: Aikenhead's Hardware; Beaver Lumber; Central; Dempsey Store; Eagle Hardware & Garden; J. Pascal's Hardware and Furniture; Pascal; TSC Stores — Swapped ...
Most of the road is filled with numerous big-box stores, strip malls or other commercial businesses. Near Boulevard Gréber in the western end of this road is Les Promenades Gatineau, the National Capital Region's second largest shopping mall which is home to Simons, Librarie Renaud-Bray, Sports Experts, Costco, Hudson's Bay and many more stores.
The CIL brand is sold in major Canadian retailers Home Depot, Canadian Tire, Walmart and Rona/Réno-Dépôt. In 1976 Industries Valcartier Inc. bought out CIL's commercial cartridge production. This granted them the rights to CIL's popular Dominion, Imperial and Canuck commercial ammunition brands.
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Its territory surrounds Échouani Lake and stretches along the western banks of the upper Gatineau River. The territory is named after the Échouani Depot, a former logging camp of the Canadian International Paper Company near the confluence of the Chouart and Gatineau Rivers, abandoned since 1962. The name is known since the nineteenth century ...