Midtown Plaza (Saskatoon)
Midtown Plaza main entrance showing the tower | |
Location | 201 1st Avenue South – Central Business District, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada |
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Coordinates | 52°07′39″N 106°40′03″W / 52.127500°N 106.667500°WCoordinates: 52°07′39″N 106°40′03″W / 52.127500°N 106.667500°W |
Opening date | 1968 (Simpson-Sears only); July 30 1970 (full mall); renovated 1990 |
Management | Sher Fleming |
Owner | Primaris Retail REIT |
No. of stores and services | 131 |
No. of anchor tenants | 2 |
Total retail floor area | 616,282 sq ft (57,254.5 m2) / 96,883 sq ft (9,000.7 m2) retail |
No. of floors |
2 (mall) 11 (tower) |
Parking | 1,000 surface north, south and Sears lot and 800 underground |
Website |
www |
Midtown Plaza is a shopping mall in Downtown Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, that is owned by Primaris Retail REIT. The two main anchors are Sears Canada and Hudson's Bay and the shopping centre has a total store count of approximately 130 stores. The mall was built on the former site of the city's main railway station as part of a major inner city redevelopment project in the 1960s that also saw construction of a freeway, the Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge, and TCU Place (formerly Centennial Auditorium) an arts-convention complex.
The mall officially opened with 51 stores and services on July 30, 1970; however, one of its anchor tenants, Simpson-Sears (now Sears Canada) opened for business in 1968.[1] Eatons was the mall's second anchor until the chain went out of business in the late 1990s; The Bay (later branded Hudson's Bay) subsequently relocated to the mall from its 2nd Avenue standalone location.
The mall was originally one storey. By 1990, a second storey was added and the façade was altered to mimic the original 1900s railway station.[2]
Also part of the Midtown Plaza complex is CN Towers – renamed in 2006 "The Tower at Midtown" – an office block that was for most of the 1970s the tallest office building in Saskatoon. The 12-story tower is 57 m (187 ft) in height.[3]
See also
References
- ↑ Midtown Plaza grand opening supplement, Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, July 29, 1970
- ↑ "Midtown Plaza Shopping Centre Expansion". CANA Construction. Retrieved 2014-11-17.
- ↑ "Canada Building". emporis.com. Retrieved 2011-02-27.
External links
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