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Carrefour Laval (corporately styled as "CF Carrefour Laval") is a superregional shopping mall in Laval, Quebec, Canada. It is located in the Chomedey neighbourhood of the city at the intersection of Laurentian Autoroute (A-15) and Autoroute Jean-Noël-Lavoie (A-440).
Carrefour de la Rive-Sud is a power centre inaugurated in Boucherville, Quebec at the corner of highways 20 and 30. It is 312,229 square feet (29,007.0 m 2) and managed by Centrecorp of Markham, Ontario. [1] Carrefour de la Rive-Sud itself inaugurated in 2003 though some of its stores like IKEA opened in 2002.
Centre Laval is paired with Quartier Laval, a power centre across the street owned by the same company, with which it makes a shopping complex called DUO. Though located only 2.5 km (1.6 mi) away from the bigger and more popular Carrefour Laval , Centre Laval is a large shopping mall in its own right with nearly 700,000 square feet (65,000 m 2 ...
The name "Cadillac Fairview" came into existence in 1974 as a result of the merger between Cadillac Development Corporation Ltd and Fairview Corporation. [4] Cadillac Development Corporation was founded by partners Ephraim Diamond (d. 2008), Joseph Berman (1922–2003), and Jack Kamin in Toronto in 1953 as a developer of high-rise apartment buildings.
Laval. Carrefour Laval [67] Centre commercial Duvernay [68] Centre commercial Saint-Martin [69] Centre commercial Val-des-Brises [citation needed] Centre Laval [70] Centropolis [71] Galeries Laval [72] Galeries du Moulin [73] Méga-Centre Sainte-Dorothée (A-13 & Notre-Dame Blvd) Méga-Centre Val-des-Brises (A-19 & A-440) SmartCentres Centre ...
French supermarket giant Carrefour was lauded for its gusty move last week when it seemingly removed PepsiCo products from stores, in a battle to fight 'shrinkflation'.
J. Pascal had long been a hardware chain only, but subsequently expanded to furniture retailing. Until the 1970s, the company's name was J. Pascal Hardware Co. After the furniture division was created in the 1980s, the company's corporate name became J. Pascal Inc.
It is the second shopping centre in the Montreal area developed and owned by the duo of Simpsons and Cemp Investments. [ 12 ] In 1975, then manager and co-owner Cadillac Fairview announced the expansion of Galeries d'Anjou to bring the total size of the shopping centre from 700,000 to 920,000 square feet. [ 13 ]