Anecdotal. Can't measure the average person's experience by your own. When I lived in Oliver, I had very few reasons to be at the core. And just because an adjacent neighborhood has certain things, does not mean another shouldn't have. Saying that DT doesn't need more street-facing, walkable food options (including, yes, fast-food chains, because they're what the average person consumes, hence why they're so big) because Oliver has them is laughable. Someone living on 104 st/Jasper Ave will not walk to 117st/104 Ave McDonalds, they'll most likely drive.

@David A has a point: the core should me more walkable, considering what it is. Oliver(Unity) Square/Brewery District serve Oliver well, because it is walkable for people living there, especially west of 112 st and north of Jasper Ave, but it is not as walkable if you're further away, especially in the winter.
I do believe the LRT will change this a lot, and It actually ties back into what I always say about low-floor LRT being great for short trips.
Most of what is shared here are stories, full stop. There is very little proof put up behind most peoples statements, including yours.

No shade, just T.
 
Most of what is shared here are stories, full stop. There is very little proof put up behind most peoples statements, including yours.
At the very least, most people here back their opinions with some degree of arguments, instead of making personal attacks on people's credibility. Or, at the very least, we'll acknowledge when things are just speculative or anecdotal.

Also, good to remind you that some of us (me included) who have connections with privileged information are also bound to things like non-disclosure agreements, or are held to a high degree of discretion if we want to keep our sources open. But we have also established a track record of being accurate, because a lot of the time, our claims end up materializing. It does fall through, every now and then, for various reasons, since most of the time we don't have immediate access to the decision-makers or our sources.
 
At the very least, most people here back their opinions with some degree of arguments, instead of making personal attacks on people's credibility. Or, at the very least, we'll acknowledge when things are just speculative or anecdotal.

Also, good to remind you that some of us (me included) who have connections with privileged information are also bound to things like non-disclosure agreements, or are held to a high degree of discretion if we want to keep our sources open. But we have also established a track record of being accurate, because a lot of the time, our claims end up materializing. It does fall through, every now and then, for various reasons, since most of the time we don't have immediate access to the decision-makers or our sources.
Yeggy is right. You are wrong. What are you, the hall monitor here?
 
I don't envy whoever is tasked with turning this mall around. I honestly have no ideas left besides tearing everything down and starting from scratch.

WEM really killed downtown retail, Edmonton is an anomaly as all the other downtown malls in Canada are the most successful of their respective cities.
 
Edmonton is an anomaly as all the other downtown malls in Canada are the most successful of their respective cities.
Objectively, the Chinook Centre is the most successful in Calgary, but I'll agree that we have the highest contrast, with WEM being one of the most successful malls in the whole country and ECC being the least successful DT mall, as far as I know
 
Objectively, the Chinook Centre is the most successful in Calgary, but I'll agree that we have the highest contrast, with WEM being one of the most successful malls in the whole country and ECC being the least successful DT mall, as far as I know
Kingsway killed local resident retail and WEM killed tourism and luxury retail would be the assessment I’d give.

And in general. Our suburbs/sprawls/and malls all did their part to draw money, people, and retail further from the core.
 
Kingsway killed local resident retail and WEM killed tourism and luxury retail would be the assessment I’d give.

And in general. Our suburbs/sprawls/and malls all did their part to draw money, people, and retail further from the core.
I honestly think the area will be better served if it focused on more teens-20's retail or experiences given the proximity of the behemoths of post-secondary institutions in the area. What that could be?

I honestly don't know, but I guess that's why forums like us exist lol
 
Objectively, the Chinook Centre is the most successful in Calgary, but I'll agree that we have the highest contrast, with WEM being one of the most successful malls in the whole country and ECC being the least successful DT mall, as far as I know
Portage Place in Winnipeg is in roughly the same position as City Centre. Hamilton’s Jackson Square (last I checked) was maybe about where City Centre was 8-10 years ago — not great but with a decent amount of amenities. Citi Plaza in London is worse off. I haven’t been but I’ve heard Cornwall Centre in Regina is very so-so, but still the healthiest remaining mall in the area.

When I think of successful downtown malls in Canada, I think of Vancouver, Victoria (unless that changed recently), Calgary, Saskatoon, Toronto, Ottawa, and Montreal. Pretty decent collection, especially compared with the States, but hardly like Edmonton is the only one missing out on this phenomenon. However, I will say what makes Edmonton stick out is that it’s the largest city with a dead downtown mall by a long shot.

WEM is definitely part of the picture, but I think Kingsway has had a more understated, but arguably bigger role at keeping Downtown Edmonton retail from thriving. Like, yeah, all the destination retail first popping up in Edmonton or only opening one location is mostly going to WEM, but what about the retailers that do branch out and feature in the region’s three “fortress” malls? Kingsway is too close to the core to make separate locations for destination stores viable in general. Uniqlo is looking at aggressively expanding across North America and just opened its 2nd Edmonton location at Southgate. You really think, if they open another one here, it’s going anywhere but Kingsway? And Kingsway’s proximity to the core will mean that there’s no way Downtown is getting a location. Rinse and repeat for Nike, Simons, Lululemon, Aritzia, Anthropologie, Apple Store, etc. Even a store like Urban Outfitters, known to try and have locations in more, well, urban locations, is far more likely to wind up on Whyte than Jasper or in City Centre.
 
I honestly think the area will be better served if it focused on more teens-20's retail or experiences given the proximity of the behemoths of post-secondary institutions in the area. What that could be?

I honestly don't know, but I guess that's why forums like us exist lol

Edmonton’s post-secondary schools are commuter schools, often with students still living at home in the suburbs. That, and even for those that have moved out and live more centrally, we’ve been so culturally conditioned in Edmonton to just go to the mall or South Common as the expected norm. Not saying this can’t change, but it’s not gonna be easy.
 
Edmonton’s post-secondary schools are commuter schools, often with students still living at home in the suburbs. That, and even for those that have moved out and live more centrally, we’ve been so culturally conditioned in Edmonton to just go to the mall or South Common as the expected norm. Not saying this can’t change, but it’s not gonna be easy.
Honestly yeah I can confirm that for a significant chunk of locals, that was the case. Hell, I was one of them. But with the growth coming more from international or interprovincial students, most of them are probably going to want to stay closer to their respective campuses, at least in my experience. I've met enough non-Edmontonians living in Oliver or Columbia Ave for that specific reason. I've also seen a decent chunk of international students living in the Mayfair on 109 too, as a specific example.
 
Objectively, the Chinook Centre is the most successful in Calgary, but I'll agree that we have the highest contrast, with WEM being one of the most successful malls in the whole country and ECC being the least successful DT mall, as far as I know
Less successful than Heritage Mall…. ?
 
Portage Place in Winnipeg is in roughly the same position as City Centre. Hamilton’s Jackson Square (last I checked) was maybe about where City Centre was 8-10 years ago — not great but with a decent amount of amenities. Citi Plaza in London is worse off. I haven’t been but I’ve heard Cornwall Centre in Regina is very so-so, but still the healthiest remaining mall in the area.

When I think of successful downtown malls in Canada, I think of Vancouver, Victoria (unless that changed recently), Calgary, Saskatoon, Toronto, Ottawa, and Montreal. Pretty decent collection, especially compared with the States, but hardly like Edmonton is the only one missing out on this phenomenon. However, I will say what makes Edmonton stick out is that it’s the largest city with a dead downtown mall by a long shot.

WEM is definitely part of the picture, but I think Kingsway has had a more understated, but arguably bigger role at keeping Downtown Edmonton retail from thriving. Like, yeah, all the destination retail first popping up in Edmonton or only opening one location is mostly going to WEM, but what about the retailers that do branch out and feature in the region’s three “fortress” malls? Kingsway is too close to the core to make separate locations for destination stores viable in general. Uniqlo is looking at aggressively expanding across North America and just opened its 2nd Edmonton location at Southgate. You really think, if they open another one here, it’s going anywhere but Kingsway? And Kingsway’s proximity to the core will mean that there’s no way Downtown is getting a location. Rinse and repeat for Nike, Simons, Lululemon, Aritzia, Anthropologie, Apple Store, etc. Even a store like Urban Outfitters, known to try and have locations in more, well, urban locations, is far more likely to wind up on Whyte than Jasper or in City Centre.
Yes, I think the comparisons put this in context better. City Centre not the worst, but there is a lot of room for improvement, especially considering our city's size. I've been to Vancouver's and wish that was what City Centre could be. Prior to 2020 it was much closer to that.

I feel one big problem was for a number of years Kingsway was owned by the same owners as City Centre. After Kingsway lost Target, their focus seemed to be on filling that big gap. I feel this was to the detriment of City Centre at a critical time, then after that COVID came along and hit downtown especially hard. Fortunately, the mall has different owners now.

It is true major retailers are attracted to busier malls. However, the three biggest malls here are fairly full now, so I could see some retailers going to other malls if they can't easily get space or expand in those three, particularly if the core areas continue to recover from COVID.

Yes, Whyte Ave may attract certain things, but it never has really been a big location for the types of stores that locate in malls, unlike say Robson Street in Vancouver. I think climate is a factor in that. Yes, people do walk still outdoors in January here, but not so much as in warmer places.
 
City centre malls issues start at its built form. One whole side of it was blatantly hostile to the street. The parking feels sketchy and again adds to the hostile street scape.

I’d also say it was always void of the right type of product mix, but im sure the loading docks were ill suited for something like an urban ikea, or urban hardware store.

Making it a through way or so many office towers just meant it always felt like a transit corridor. The energy of the space inside was always one of movement, not of relaxed exploration.

Further more not having street level crossing under the pedway continues to be absurd. Meanwhile getting to the second floor pedway normally required a lot of back and forth walking.

Its also not talked about but there were also numerous suicides. People jumped internally from the top floor as well as from the top of the parkades externally.
 

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