The Bay
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The Bay | |
---|---|
Type | Department store |
Founded | 1670 - HBC incorporated by Royal Charter 1881 - HBC opens its first department store 1964 - Chain rebranded as "The Bay" |
Headquarters | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Industry | Retail |
Products | Clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, electronics, and housewares. |
Parent | Hudson's Bay Company ("HBC") |
Website | www.thebay.com |
The Bay is a chain of 94 fashion department stores that operate across parts of Canada. It is the main brand of Hudson's Bay Company ("HBC"), North America's oldest company.
In French, the chain is known as La Baie, short for "Compagnie de la Baie d'Hudson". The chain uses both the English and French versions of the name in some parts of the country.
The stores are full-line department stores, with a focus on apparel, accessories, and home goods. Most price points are mid- to upper-mid; however, there is an assortment of everyday low-price merchandise. The Bay can be compared to U.S. retailer Macy's, and is more up-market than Sears Canada department stores. The average store is 135,000 square feet (12,500 m2). Flagship downtown stores exist in Canada's largest cities, including Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, Toronto, Ottawa, and Montreal. These stores are larger in size and carry a much broader range of goods than their mall counterparts.
Contents |
[edit] History
Although Hudson's Bay Company opened its first department store in 1881, the name "The Bay" appeared in 1964 after Hudson's Bay Company decided to rebrand all of its department stores, with the exception of those located in Quebec.
In Quebec, The Bay appeared for the first time in 1972 after Hudson's Bay Company converted it's Morgan's department stores.
The Bay further expanded its presence in Eastern Canada from 1989 to 1991 by absorbing the Simpsons department store chain, and 1993 in Western Canada by taking over many former Woodward's outlets.
In 1991, after 320 years, Hudson's Bay Company stopped selling fur. The decision was regarded as a response to widespread public sentiment opposing the perceived inhumane killing of animals for clothing;[1] however, in 1997 the company reopened their fur salons in Bay stores. Animal rights groups, such as Freedom for Animals, have been campaigning to get the Bay to once again stop selling fur.
Recent additions to larger (namely flagship) stores of the Bay include the Style Outlet and Pharmamart sections. Style Outlets, off-price departments located in 14 stores, offer designer labels at discounted prices, much like the Winners chain. This department, introduced in 2003, was the launching pad for HBC's newest division, Designer Depot, which launched in the fall of 2004.
Pharmamart is a centre that includes basic grocery and household items and, among other amenities, a pharmacy. This can be interpreted as an attempt to compete directly with Shoppers Drug Mart, Wal-Mart or others, and also as a response to the success of the basic grocery addition in the modern Zellers prototype.
In Downtown Toronto, the Queen Street Bay store, formerly Simpsons, includes the Department 'St. Regis Room' on the third floor. It is an upscale women's clothing department carrying some of the most prestigious and expensive women's designer labels in Canada. Designers include Givenchy, Christian Lacroix, Emmanuel Ungaro, Balmain, Valentino Roma, Armani Collezioni, Louis Feraud, Karl Lagerfeld, Lida Baday, Andrew Gn, Bellville Sassoon, David Hayes, and others.
Started in 2007, exterior restorations are currently underway at three of the company's flagship stores in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. A new store in Waterloo, Ontario, is being built to replace an older, smaller location for 2008.
In 2008, the company confirmed that it will be moving their downtown Toronto head office and most headquarters functions to the Zellers head office in Brampton.
[edit] Locations
[edit] Alberta
- Banff: Banff
- Calgary: Market Mall
- Calgary: Southcentre Mall
- Calgary: Downtown Calgary
- Calgary: Chinook Centre
- Calgary: Sunridge Mall
- Edmonton: Kingsway Garden Mall
- Edmonton: Londonderry Mall
- Edmonton: Southgate Centre
- Edmonton: The Bay Edmonton City Centre
- Edmonton: West Edmonton Mall
- Lethbridge: Lethbridge Centre Mall
- Medicine Hat: Medicine Hat Mall
- Red Deer: Bower Place
- St. Albert: St. Albert Centre
[edit] British Columbia
- Abbotsford: Sevenoaks Shopping Centre
- Burnaby: Lougheed Town Centre
- Burnaby: Metropolis at Metrotown
- Coquitlam: Coquitlam Centre
- Kamloops: Aberdeen Mall
- Kelowna: Orchard Park Shopping Centre
- Langley: Willowbrook Shopping Centre
- Nanaimo: Woodgrove Centre
- Penticton: Cherry Lane Shopping Centre
- Prince George: Parkwood Shopping Centre
- Richmond: Richmond Centre
- Surrey: Guildford Town Centre
- Vancouver: Oakridge Centre
- Vancouver: Downtown Vancouver
- Vernon: Village Green Mall
- Victoria: Mayfair Shopping Centre
- Victoria: The Bay Centre. Opened as Eaton's in 1989. Became the Bay in 2003.
- West Vancouver: Park Royal Shopping Centre
[edit] Manitoba
- Winnipeg: Downtown Winnipeg, Portage Place – Officially the Bay flagship store, though much smaller than Toronto's Queen Street store.
- Winnipeg: Polo Park Shopping Centre. Opened as Eaton's. Became the Bay in 2003.
- Winnipeg: St. Vital Centre
[edit] New Brunswick
- Moncton: Highfield Square Shopping Centre
[edit] Nova Scotia
- Dartmouth: Mic Mac Mall
- Halifax: Halifax Shopping Centre Annex
- Sydney: Mayflower Mall
[edit] Ontario
- Barrie: Georgian Mall, formerly a K-Mart
- Brampton: Bramalea City Centre
- Burlington: Burlington Mall. Opened as Simpsons-Sears. Became the Bay in 1991.
- Burlington: Mapleview Shopping Centre
- Cambridge: Cambridge Centre
- Etobicoke: Sherway Gardens
- Hamilton: Lime Ridge Mall. Opened as Eaton's in 1983. Became the Bay in 1992.
- Kingston: Cataraqui Town Centre Opened as Simpsons. Became the Bay in 1986.
- Kitchener: Fairview Park. Originally Simpsons
- London: Masonville Place
- London: White Oaks Mall. Originally Simpsons
- Markham: Markville Shopping Centre
- Mississauga: Erin Mills Town Centre
- Mississauga: Square One Shopping Centre
- Newmarket: Upper Canada Mall
- North York: Yorkdale Shopping Centre. Originally Simpsons
- Oakville: Oakville Place
- Oshawa: Oshawa Centre
- Ottawa: Freiman Mall, across from Rideau Centre. Opened in 1918 as Freiman's. Became the Bay in 1972.
- Ottawa: St. Laurent Shopping Centre
- Ottawa (Orléans): Place d'Orleans
- Ottawa (Nepean): Bayshore Shopping Centre
- Pickering: Pickering Town Centre
- Rexdale: Woodbine Centre
- Richmond Hill: Hillcrest Mall
- Scarborough: Eglinton Square
- Scarborough: Scarborough Town Centre
- St. Catharines: The Pen Centre Opened as Robinson's, 1975. Became The Bay in 1992.
- Toronto: Bloor Street
- Toronto: Queen Street
- The Bay Queen Street, located at the southwest corner of Queen Street West and Yonge Street in Downtown Toronto, the de facto flagship store, is Canada's largest department store with 1,000,000 square feet (93,000 m2) of retail space. The store occupies a full city block and is connected by a skyway over Queen Street to the Toronto Eaton Centre.[2] Fifty-two of this location's Simpsons employees fought in World War II, and are commemorated in a plaque at the south-east entrance. The location offers three restaurants, the Arcadian Court Restaurant, Great Cooks on Eight, and City View Café.
- Waterloo: Conestoga Mall. Opened as Robinson's in 1978. A new Bay store is under construction for 2008.
- Willowdale: Centrepoint Mall
- Willowdale: Fairview Mall
- Windsor: Devonshire Mall. Originally Simpsons
[edit] Quebec
- Anjou: Les Galeries d'Anjou
- Brossard: Mail Champlain
- Dorval: Les Jardins Dorval
- Gatineau: Les Promenades de l'Outaouais
- Laval: Centre Laval
- Laval: Carrefour Laval
- Mount Royal: Centre Rockland
- Montreal: Le Boulevard
- Montreal: Saint Catherine Street West. Opened As Morgan's in 1889. Became the Bay in 1972.
- Pointe-Claire: Fairview Pointe-Claire
- Quebec City: Galeries de la Capitale
- Quebec City: Place Fleur-de-Lys
- Sainte-Foy: Place Laurier
- Rosemère: Place Rosemère
- Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville: Les Promenades Saint-Bruno
- Sainte-Foy: Place Laurier
- Sherbrooke: Carrefour de l'Estrie