Crowds of people came and went — and patiently waited for burgers — all day long at a barbecue jointly sponsored by Costco and the Thorncliffe Park Tenants Association Saturday September 28, 2013. It was clearly a neighborhood affair with a mixture of dress but with a distinct subcontinental presence. Masses of orderly and happy people streamed on and off the old parking lot of the former Coca Cola property It’s easy to lose count over about 500 because people move around. But it seems reasonable that there were no fewer than 2,000 people, including children, on the lot at any given time. A figure of as many as 3,000 on the day — 1 to 5 p.m. — seems quite possible. It was an impressive show of support for the proposed Costco re-development The company wishes to demolish the Coke factory and 1965 office building to put up an approximately 150,000 square foot store and adjoining service station. It has said it will ensure green space and a place of honour for the bronze sculpture that Coca Cola commissioned when it built the site nearly 50 years ago. Abbas Kolia, president of the tenants association was present with other community leaders, representatives of Costco and various interested parties. Janet Sherbanowski, executive director of the Crime Prevention Association of Toronto, was offering the view that a Costco would provide good paying jobs closer to home for parents of the many young people living in Thorncliffe Park. The idea that there is decent money to be earned working for Costco was not lost on the crowd. Signs urging people to sign a petition said: “Costco = Jobs + Prosperity for Us”. Out on Overlea Blvd. a red and yellow sign announced the barbecue and proclaimed “We Welcome Costco”. Dozens of local teenagers, all wearing orange shirts emblazoned with the name of the tenants association, formed platoons of information helpers around the property..