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Midtown (formerly Midtown Plaza) is a shopping mall in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, located in the Central Business District neighbourhood. The main anchor store is Hudson's Bay and the shopping centre has a total store count of 154 stores. [ 1 ]
Saskatoon has established several "suburban centres" in neighbourhoods away from the downtown core, most of which include a major commercial component: Blairmore Suburban Centre; Confederation Suburban Centre - includes Confederation Mall, Plaza 22 Strip Mall, Canadian Tire, Superstore, and Royal Square Strip Mall; Lakewood Suburban Centre
The Saskatoon downtown revitalization project began in the 1950s and 1960s when the Canadian National Railway yards were removed and replaced with a shopping mall in its image called the Midtown Plaza, and its neighbor the Saskatoon Centennial Auditorium and Convention Centre (recently renamed TCU Place). Eaton's and Simpson's Sears were the ...
The 2nd Avenue Lofts is a historic building located in the Central Business District of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.. The original building on the site was a five-story concrete and steel building with a pressed brick facade building constructed in 1913, to house the J.F. Cairns Department Store.
Midtown Plaza may refer to: Midtown Plaza (Rochester), a defunct shopping mall in Rochester, New York, United States; Midtown Plaza (Saskatoon), a shopping mall in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada; Johnston Building (Charlotte, North Carolina), also known as the Midtown Plaza
Confederation Mall is a 329,128 sq. ft. [1] shopping mall located at 22nd Street and Circle Drive in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. The mall was originally named Confederation Park Plaza when it opened in mid-1973, at which time its anchor tenants were Canada Safeway and Woolco. [citation needed]
On opening it covered 23,225 square metres and had the first enclosed food court in Saskatoon, along with many independent and franchise chains (including the city's first purpose-built mall video arcade) and was promoted as one of the province's largest suburban malls; it also boasted the largest Safeway store in Saskatchewan. [1]
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