Shoppers in Ottawa have split 50-50 in an Ottawa Sun poll asking whether the newly-opened Whole Foods Market there should have been doing business on the day Christ was crucified. In fact, there is no way of knowing what those opposed to the opening were thinking. The people in favour just want to shop. In the past, province-wide polls have shown a majority would support all-holiday openings. Ottawa area MPP Lisa McLeod got quite exercised about the Whole Foods opening, but merely said that Ontarians must obey the law. She did not say that she would demand that a charge be laid. The fine might be as much as $50,000. In the past, a first offense has usually netted government coffers an amount equal to that day’s receipts. It is of interest in South Bayview because Summerhill Market opened Good Friday while other grocery stores were closed. And of course, Whole Foods is preparing a new store in the development at 1860 Bayview. Will we be discussing a rogue opening by that store in 2016? Maybe not. The issue of holiday openings in Ontario (and Toronto) is an incredible crazy quilt of “yes” and “no” even before we get to exempted workers like movie theatre staff. It is believed by some legal minds that the entire system is unsustainable in front of the Charter of Rights. But the question has never been referred to the court much less tested by the justices. And it appears there haven’t been charges laid either, perhaps because the government doesn’t want a well-heeled retailer to take it to the Supremes. Think about it.
Tag: 1860 Bayview
New stores hint of coming grocery showdown on Bayview
by
•
The hoardings are now down at the work site where The Beer Store and Tim Hortons wills stand on the southwest corner of Roehampton Ave and Bayview Ave. The Beer Store was torn down last year and the replacement added an extra element of interest, the coffee shop. Metro will be in hammer and tongs competition with Whole Foods Market as that store opens later this year in the 1860 Bayview at Broadway Ave. complex.
Sobey’s event hints at grocery store competition
by
•You don’t have to look hard to see the intense grocery store competition in South Bayview. It has been chronicled here before and this morning at a chilly 8 a.m. ceremony MP John Carmichael and John Parker (Ward 26) participated in the ribbon cutting at Sobey’s in the SmartCentre on Laird Drive. The store was having its Grand Opening. It follows by less than a week the Grand Opening of the refurbished Metro at Bayview Ave. and Eglinton Ave. E. Both these food mammoths, as well as Loblaws, Valu mart, Longo’s and a gaggle of smaller operators have their eyes on the furious work going on at 1860 Bayview Ave at Broadway Ave. It is here that Whole Foods will open next year. Whole Foods Market, Inc is a dynamic Austin, Texas-based firm with stores in the US, Canada, and the UK. It specializes in all-natural and organic foods. Some think the strategy is more directed toward the installation of its own brands. This is a growing phenomenon particularly at Loblaws. It is now necessary to visit independent operators to buy well-known brand names like Silk soy milk. In the case of Whole Foods, brand names like Coca Cola and Becel are missing from the shelves.
Pile driver, trailer now on site at 1860 Bayview
by
•The construction trailer and a pile driver are now on site as work begins on the commercial development at 1860 Bayview Ave at Broadway. Ave. The site is being purchased over time by RioCan Real Estate Investment, the dynamic property company that owns Sunnybrook Plaza and the Leaside Centre at the corner of Eglinton Ave. E. and Laird Drive. This location is most notable for the impending opening of a Whole Foods market of some 50,000 square feet on the second floor of the development. In this case, the “anchor” business will be located upstairs. The property is being developed by Kingsett and Trinity Development Group and RioCan is acquiring the site on “a forward purchase basis in phases” at an approximate purchase price of $58 million. The store is expected to open sometime in 2015 There will be 193 parking spaces in a two-level underground garage. Neighbourhood improvements, including road widening along Bayview and Broadway Avenues to accommodate traffic concerns, were secured as part of the settlement with ratepayers.
Whole Foods will face bristling competition
by
•Bree Rody-Mantha writing online in PostCity.com reviews the arrival sometime in 2015 of Whole Foods in the little commercial complex yet-to-be-built at 1860 Bayview Ave corner of Broadway Ave. This is the former site of Rumble and later Brennan Pontiac. The article is worth a read for the opinion offered by Stan Janecek, the owner of White House Meats at 1523 Bayview. The issue for many is just how hurtful yet another grocery anchor will be to business along South Bayview. Mr. Janecek seems to think that it will be a battle of the big guys (our term). Ms Rody-Mantha mentions Loblaws, Metro, Sobey’s Valu mart and Longo’s. She might have added Summerhill Market in both Rosedale and at 1054 Mt. Pleasant Rd. in Sherwood Park. Many families remember mom and dad shopping at the Mt Pleasant location when it was Bilton’s. Summerhill Market will be no slouch in defending its well-heeled clientele. What they prepare and stock is top notch and there’s no worrisome doubt about brand names. Whole Foods is finicky. The firm has a reputation for refusing to carry things like Coca Cola and other items apparently for dietetic reasons that aren’t always clear. In any case, it is commonly said that South Bayview, as nice as it is, cannot support a full-up grocery store which has no parking lot. Unlike most of the things one can purchase here, groceries are heavy. That was the lesson of the public-spirited effort by Bruno’s to plant his business in the old Bayview Playhouse. And those who followed Bruno’s at the playhouse location did not pursue an aggressive policy of carry-to-your-car for customers. As we know, the playhouse is now a Shoppers Drug Mart. Carry-to-your-car is a lesson that Summerhill seems to have learned. Bree Rody-Mantha
RioCan on track to acquire 1860 Bayview Ave.
by
•RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust has announced buoyant growth of 17% in operating funds from operations in first half of 2013 In its statement Wednesday morning RioCan, headquartered at Yonge St. and Eglinton ave. W., noted that it is still on track to purchase the development at 1860 Bayview Ave. at Broadway Ave. The statement says that Kingsett and Trinity Development Group “are currently developing a grocery-anchored centre on the site, and RioCan will acquire the site on a forward purchase basis in phases at an approximate purchase price of $58 million, at a capitalization rate of 5.4%. Once completed, the centre will consist of approximately 74,220 square feet of retail space and will be anchored by a 50,200 square foot Whole Foods. The initial acquisition is expected to close during the third quarter of 2013, with the remaining portions to be paid on an earn-out basis upon completion of the project.”
40 more stores in Canada says Whole Foods
by
•The plan to open a Whole Foods supermarket in the as-yet unbuilt RioCan development at 1860 Bayview Ave (at Broadway Ave.) is only part of what appears to a very ambitious expansion in Canada. John Mackey, whose title is co-CEO, has told a conference in Montreal that as many as 40 stores might eventually be opened here. The target gross sales in Canada would be $billion annually, he said. Mr. Mackey would not say how long such a program of growth might take. He was speaking at the C2-Mtl conference. This appears to be a Montreal-based annual meeting described online as a “three-day event (that) is designed to inspire right and left brain thinking through a smorgasbord of non-traditional experiences, including multimedia conferences by world class speakers, engaging exhibitions, collaborative workshops, a creativity Boot Camp and evening festivities.” Whole Foods is an Austin, Texas-based grocery chain that is much admired by many consumers but shunned by others because it excludes lines it considers either unhealthy or unorganic. Many complain for example that they can’t buy Coca Cola at Whole Foods, nor get brand name margerines like Becel.
RioCan set to buy 1860 Bayview at Broadway
by
•The large Canadian commercial real estate owner and manager RioCan has announced this morning that it has “waived conditions pursuant to a purchase and sale agreement” for 1860 Bayview Ave. at Broadway Ave. This is the old Brennan’s Pontiac site which is now being developed by Kingsett and Trinity Devleopments as a commercial site anchored by Whole Foods grocery store. The release says that RioCan, which owns both the Sunnybrook Plaza and the Leaside Centre on Laird Drive, will be acquiring the completed site at 1860 Bayview on a forward purchase basis at an expected purchase price of $58 million. The Whole foods store is said to be planned at 50,220 square feet.
Whole Foods still set to open at 1860 Bayview
by
•The new owners of the property at 1860 Bayview say they are readying a program of consultation with the community. Trillium Development Group purchased the site late this year and are working their way through the details of the zoning which were approved for any commercial use of the land. Trillium was able to confirm that Whole Foods is still scheduled to become a tenant at 1860 Bayview. The Austin, Texas-based company will lease the second floor of a two storey complex. Trillium said talks continue with other prospective tenants. The matter went to the Ontario Municipal Board this year which approved a settlement permitting the construction of the approximately 16 metre retail/commercial building with 193 parking spaces in a two-level underground garage. Neighbourhood improvements, including road widening along Bayview and Broadway Avenues to accommodate traffic concerns, were secured as part of the settlement. .
1860 Bayview now in hands of Trinity Group
by
•1860 Bayview Ave |
A new sign at the planned development at the corner of Bayview and Broadway Aves is inviting “retail inquiries” and reminds viewers that this will be the site of a Whole Foods outlet in due course. Just how soon is a little unclear as the land has apparently changed hands from Starbanks Developments to the Trinity Group. There is not too much to learn from their website. The company’s activities are boiled down to three words– Design, Develop, Build. There was to be a meeting with ratepayers on just what the development might look like But important family business has intervened so that meeting is yet to be scheduled, although it will presumably be soon. http://www.trinity-group.com/home/<
Whole Foods to open at 1860 Bayview site
by
•It’s been announced that Whole Foods will open a store in the commercial development at Bayview Ave and Broadway Ave. Whole Foods is a large natural foods firm with a store in Hazelton Lanes. Scheduled for completion in conjunction with the rest of the development, the 4,600-square-metre store will be located at 1860 Bayview Ave., just north of Eglinton Avenue. The property, next door to Mount Hope Cemetery, was the former home of Brennan Pontiac. The Austin, Tex.,-based grocer has more than 300 locations worldwide, including seven Canadian stores, all of which are in Vancouver or the Greater Toronto Area. It was founded in 1980 to sell upscale natural and organic foods free of artificial ingredients and hydrogenated fats. It has been subject to criticism however when unsuspecting shoppers are unable to purchase favorite brand names like Coca Cola and Becel margarine. (#whole)
OMB decision on 1860 Bayview released
by
•A final decision on the development at 1860 Bayview Ave. at Broadway Ave has been released by the Ontario Municipal Board. There will not be any surprises for those who have followed the matter. The developer, Starbank Developments 1860 Corp., acquiesced to residents concerns relating to traffic. There will be road-widening along both Bayview and Broadway and a northbound left-turn lane “to direct traffic onto the site.” Elsewhere, there would be “various restrictions on turning notably to limit traffic into the neighbouring residential community.” It appears from a diagram that there will be an entrance and/or exit into the in-building parking on Bayview with a similar feature on Broadway. There will be, it is said, 193 parking spaces. The OMB decision quotes Starbanks as saying that while parking “would not (conform) to the 1960’s standards foreseen in the by-law, parking spaces would be ample in light of today’s actual parking requirements, with the added feature of ‘generous drive aisle width’ to make people very comfortable’ parking inside.” Diagram