Hillcrest Mall

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Hillcrest Mall
HillcrestMallEntrance2.jpg
Hillcrest Mall east entrance
LocationRichmond Hill, Ontario, Canada
Coordinates43°51′16″N 79°26′05″W / 43.85443°N 79.43463°W / 43.85443; -79.43463Coordinates: 43°51′16″N 79°26′05″W / 43.85443°N 79.43463°W / 43.85443; -79.43463
Opening date8 August 1974
DeveloperCadillac Fairview
ManagementOxford Properties
No. of stores and services135
No. of anchor tenants3
Total retail floor area54,419 m2 (585,758 sq ft)
No. of floors1

Hillcrest Mall, or Hillcrest, is a 54,419-square-metre (585,758 sq ft) enclosed shopping centre located in the town of Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, on the northwest corner of Yonge Street and Carrville Road. It has 135 shops, services, and restaurants.

History[]

Hillcrest Mall was built on a 19-hectare (46-acre) lot on the northwest corner of Yonge Street and Carrville Road.[1] Architectural drawings were produced by Bregman and Hamann, and the interior design by Robert Meiklejohn.[1] The project was a joint venture of Cadillac Fairview and Greater York Group.[2] Lighting at the mall was designed with input from the David Dunlap Observatory to mitigate light pollution.[3] This included minimal signage, shielded lights in the parking lot, and a light-absorbing parking lot surface.[2]

It opened on August 8, 1974 with four anchor stores: Simpsons, Kmart, Sears, and Loblaws supermarket.[1] It had over 100 stores occupying 50,000 m2 (540,000 sq ft) at its grand opening,[1] during which the first 10,000 Simpsons patrons received a rose, a symbolic gesture reflecting Richmond Hill's past status as the rose growing capital of Canada.[4][1] Simpsons also used a rose in its local advertising.[1] Hillcrest Mall also held a draw, the winner of which was given a two-week all expenses paid trip to Mexico.[1]

The central square featured four ficus trees imported from Florida under a vaulted ceiling.[1] The market court was a food court with picnic seating and gaslight lamps.[1] A 250-seat auditorium with stage and kitchen was also part of the design, and was made available for community activities.[1] The auditorium was used for fashion shows.[1]

A five auditorium movie theatre operated by Cineplex Odeon Corporation opened in October 1980, with a total seating capacity of 519; this space is now a GoodLife Fitness.[5]

Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) acquired Simpsons in 1978, and by 1991 had rebranded the anchor store as The Bay. Zellers opened in the mall in 1988 in the former Sears location.[6] HBC leased the retail space previously occupied by Zellers at the southern end of the mall after Zellers moved to the former Kmart location at the north end of the mall in 1998, and used it for Hudson Bay's Men's Store and Home.[7]

The mall underwent extensive renovations in 2000. In late 2002, construction of a separate building in the northeast corner of the mall's parking lot was completed; it was the site of the second Krispy Kreme franchise in Canada[8] until 2005, and is now the site of Panera Bread. In 2006, a farmers' market was established on the premises, operating from the mall's parking lot two days a week.[9]

Oxford Properties bought Hillcrest Mall from Cadillac Fairview in April 2011.[10]

The Bay Fashion Store, now simply known as The Bay, located centrally in Hillcrest Mall, is one of the mall's anchor stores
Target at Hillcrest opened in 2013 and closed in 2015.

In 2011, HBC sold the leases of most of its Zellers stores to Target Corporation; the mall's Zellers closed in early 2013 with Target Canada taking over the anchor space and reopening in its place on November 13, 2013. In January 2015, Target announced the liquidation of all its Canadian stores and closed in mid 2015.[11] The lease was acquired by landlord Oxford Properties.[12] The space was redeveloped and jointly leased to discount retailers Marshalls and HomeSense, which opened in September 2018.[13]

In 2013, an application was made to Richmond Hill Town Council to exempt the mall from the Retail Business Holidays Act so that it may open on six public holidays: New Year's Day, Family Day, Good Friday, Victoria Day, Canada Day, Labour Day, and Thanksgiving.[14] The holiday exemption application was accepted, and the mall now only closes on Easter Sunday and Christmas.[15]

On September 12, 2015, Hudson's Bay expanded anchor store was officially reopened. The $125 million project expanded the store by 7,500 m2 (81,000 sq ft) of retail space to 11,000 m2 (120,000 sq ft) total,[16][17] into which was merged its "Men's Store and Home". The vacated anchor space was reconstructed for other tenants, which by the end of 2016 included Sporting Life, H&M, Aritzia, and Pandora.[18][17]

On October 24, 2017, Hillcrest announced that they would put Marshalls, HomeSense, Indigo, and Old Navy stores in the former Target space in November 2018 along with a major interior renovation. The mall's interior got a refresh with new floors, lighting, washrooms, ceilings, upgraded food court, and new entrances 1 & 6 which was completed by October 2018.[19]

Several large retailers used to be located at Hillcrest Mall:

  • Simpson's - Closed in 1991 and replaced with The Bay.
  • Kmart - Closed in 1998 and replaced with Zellers.
  • Sears - Closed in 1986 (moved to The Promenade) and replaced with Zellers.
  • The Bay - Opened in 1991 in former Simpson's location. Men's Store and Home moved from main store to former Zellers location in 1999; main store renamed "Fashion Store". Men's Store and Home moved back to main store and replaced by south expansion in 2015.
  • Zellers - Opened in 1988[20] in former Sears location; moved in 1998 to former Kmart location; liquidated and closed in Spring 2013. Replaced by Target.
  • Target - Opened in 2013, liquidated and closed in mid-2015. Replaced by north expansion.

The York Regional Police Community Resource Centre was located in the mall, and has now relocated to the southwest corner of Elgin Mills Road West and Yonge Street.

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k The Liberal & 7 August 1974, p. 1.
  2. ^ a b The Liberal & 14 August 1974, p. 1.
  3. ^ Bolton 1978.
  4. ^ Levy-McLaughlin 2014.
  5. ^ Pendakur 1990, p. 226.
  6. ^ "Suburban plazas of yesteryear now thriving shopping malls". Toronto Star. June 7, 1988. p. I7.
  7. ^ Beck 2014.
  8. ^ Brief 2002, p. D2.
  9. ^ Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation.
  10. ^ Newmarket Era 2011.
  11. ^ Rooney 2015.
  12. ^ Strauss 2015.
  13. ^ Kockerscheidt 2018.
  14. ^ Richmond Hill Town Council 2013.
  15. ^ Kopun 2014.
  16. ^ Beck 2015.
  17. ^ a b Kopun 2016.
  18. ^ Zarzour 2016.
  19. ^ https://retail-insider.com/retail-insider/2019/01/hillcrest-mall-richmond-hill/
  20. ^ "Suburban plazas of yesteryear now thriving shopping malls". Toronto Star. June 7, 1988. p. I7.

References[]

External links[]

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