Rockland Centre
Rockland Centre (French: Centre Rockland) is an upscale shopping mall located in the town of Mount Royal, Quebec, Canada. The mall is situated at the intersections of the Metropolitan Boulevard, Chemin Rockland and Acadie Boulevard, adjacent to the Park Extension neighbourhood of Montreal proper.
Centre Rockland | |
![]() Rockland Centre from the southern parking | |
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Location | Mount Royal, Quebec, Canada |
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Coordinates | 45°31′41.3″N 73°38′53.0″W |
Address | 2305, chemin Rockland |
Opening date | August 1959 |
Management | Cominar |
Owner | Cominar |
Architect | Victor Prus |
No. of stores and services | 170 |
No. of anchor tenants | 10 |
Total retail floor area | 647,000 square feet (60,100 m2) (GLA) |
No. of floors | 3 |
Parking | Indoor & Outdoor |
Public transit access | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Website | centrerockland |
Modern tenants
Rockland Centre is home to H&M, Vero Moda, Jack & Jones, Rudsak, Massimo Dutti, Michael Kors, Stuart Weitzman, Zara and Guess.
Current structure
Rockland Centre has three floors. But only the second and third floors are shopping space.
The first floor has only four tenants: Sports Experts, Nautilus Plus fitness club, Eggspectation restaurant and Urban Planet shop.
The second (main) floor features boutiques and the anchors Linen Chest (part of the old Eaton's space), Pharmaprix and longtime tenant Hudson's Bay.
The third (top) floor consists of boutiques and the mall's food court. The second floor of Hudson's Bay is located on the mall's top floor.
Historical
Original shopping centre (1959-1982)
Rockland Centre first opened in 1959 with Steinberg's, Morgan's, Woolworth's, Holt Renfrew, United Cigars and 35-40 other tenants.[1][2]
The original Rockland Centre was an outdoor shopping centre.[3] It was a single-story shopping centre.[4] Morgan's, however, had three floors. Rockland Centre was built on what used to be a golf course.[5] It was designed by architect Victor Prus,[2] and commissioned by Morgan's and Steinberg's.[6]
Some of the tenants of the original centre included Reitmans, Laura Secord Chocolates, Browns Shoes and Bank of Montreal.[7]
The Morgan's stores in Montreal were rebranded as The Bay in 1972.[8] The Bay at Rockland was at the time the largest of the retailer's locations in Montreal after the company's flagship branch and remained so even after the opening in August 1972 of the store at Centre Laval.[9] (The Rockland store however had less of its total space dedicated to sales than the Laval location.[9])
Conversion into an upscale indoor mall (1982-1983)
By 1982, Rockland Centre was in steady decline due to the emergence of newer shopping centres.[5] Its 80 tenants had their sales decrease by a third over the previous decade.[5]
Rockland Centre began on April 23, 1982 a major renovation to transform itself into the upscale shopping mall it is today.[10] Most of the original shopping centre was demolished. Only Steinberg's, The Bay and a handful of small tenants were spared from demolition.[3] The Bay temporarily closed its store on January 15, 1983 for renovation with the intent of reopening in August 1983 with the new mall.[11]
Rockland reopened on August 24, 1983 as a three level shopping centre with 175 stores anchored by The Bay, Eaton's, Steinberg's and Holt Renfrew.[12] Except for Eaton's, these anchors were all part of the original shopping centre.[13] Unlike the original Rockland, this one was an enclosed mall.[3] Rockland more than doubled its size at 700,000 square feet (65,000 m2).[13] The Eaton's store was built in the place of the demolished shops from the old shopping centre, at 139,000 square feet (12,900 m2) and making a fifth of the size of the new mall.[14] The Bay reopened in a new building of 153,000 square feet (14,200 m2), larger and adjacent to its former location, but with two floors instead of three. Unlike the majority of the old shopping centre, The Bay's original building was never demolished and was instead converted into mall space (with its first floor turned into a food court). Holt Renfrew inaugurated a new 25,000 square feet (2,300 m2) store; its largest at the time in a shopping mall.[15] The Cumberland pharmacy doubled its size, while fitness chain Nautilus (known today as Nautilus Plus) opened its largest location at 14,000 square feet (1,300 m2).[15] Linen-Chest moved to the mall its original store that had been located since 1961 on Queen Mary Road in the Snowdon neighbourhood.[16][14] A multi-level parking was built on the north side between The Bay and Eaton's during the transformation of the shopping centre.
The $65-million reconstruction of the mall was handled by a three-company developer group made of property manager Westcliff Developments along with Ivanhoe (the real estate arm of Steinberg's) and Ringold Enterprises, all based in Montreal.[4] Others investors in the project included Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec and three other institutions.[4] The Bay and Eaton's also invested heavily in the design of their respective stores.[4]
Demise of Steinberg's and afterwards (1992-present)
Steinberg's became a Metro in 1992.[17]
Today the space is shared between Pharmaprix, a relocated Bank of Montreal and a vacant spot last occupied by a moved SAQ.
Demise of Eaton's and afterwards (1999-present)
Rockland's Eaton's was one of the remaining six stores[lower-alpha 1] left in the Montreal area by the time of the retailer's collapse in 1999.[18]
After 17 years on the same site in the basement, the existing Linen-Chest store moved upstairs on December 5, 2001 into the former Eaton's location, almost doubling size from 15,000 to 25,000 square feet.[19] The rest of the first floor of Eaton's eventually went to Laura.[20] As of 2018, the size of the Linen-Chest store has been reduced to half of what it was following a massive renovation that caused it to be temporarily closed for three months, while Laura relocated elsewhere in the mall as a regular boutique.[20][21] An IGA supermarket will open in those vacant spaces during Spring 2020.[22][23]
The second floor of Eaton's was initially taken over by Sports Experts. In 2005, the Sports Experts store was moved to the vacant food court area on the first floor (The Bay's until 1983). In a swap of locations, the food court was moved to the second floor where Sports Experts had been (and which had been Eaton's second floor). Almost 15 years later, the food court was closed for many months in 2018 to undergo a major renovation.[24] A fresh new food court was launched in early 2019 as "La Cuisine".[25] Also located within the second floor of the former Eaton's store is a Renaud-Bray bookstore which opened on October 4, 2018.[26][21] The aforementioned second floor used to have a H&M store which has since closed and is now vacant.[20][21]
Remnant of the original Rockland Centre
Although revitalised into mall space in 1983, the exterior of the old Morgan's/The Bay building can still been seen to this day from the multi-level parking lot.
Popular culture
The mall was the filming location in 1992 for the season 1 finale "Tale of the Pinball Wizard" from the children's horror/fantasy television show Are You Afraid of the Dark?.
See also
References
- Rockland Centre, Downtown, Fairview Pointe-Claire, Carrefour Laval, Promenades Saint-Bruno and Galeries d'Anjou
- "Phone directory (1959)". Lovell. p. 376. Retrieved 2019-09-08.
- "Anniversary promotion to mark our 60th anniversary".
- "Rockland Centre rebuilding". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. August 5, 1982. p. 23.
- "Montreal site ready to open". Globe & Mail. Toronto. 12 August 1983. p. B3.
- "68$ millions pour rénover Rockland". Le Devoir. Montreal. 5 August 1982. p. 7. Retrieved 2019-07-06.
- "Les plans du centre d'achats approuvés". La Presse. Montreal. 9 September 1958. p. 13.
- "Rockland advertisement". La Presse. Montreal. 15 November 1961. p. 14.
- "The Bay advertisement". La Presse. Montreal. 21 June 1972.
- "The Bay anchors Centre Laval mall". Women's Wear Daily. New York. 18 August 1972. p. 49.
- "Le Centre Rockland remis à neuf pour $68 millions". La Presse. Montreal. 5 August 1982. p. B1.
- "The Bay's advertizement page". La Presse. Montreal. 5 January 1983. p. B5.
- "Rockland Centre advertising page". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. August 24, 1983. p. D2.
- "Expansion doubles mall size". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. August 24, 1983. p. F1.
- "Rockland, le centre commercial des années 80". La Presse. Montreal. 24 August 1983. p. E1.
- "New Centre Rockland Centre Attracts Crème-de-la-Crème of Retail Fashion Community". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. February 22, 1983. p. C2.
- "How Linen Chest grew to take on its big box rivals | Financial Post". September 20, 2014.
- "Former Steinberg stores begin the changeover". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. 8 June 1992. p. A5.
- "Real-estate shakeup seen: Stores are in prime locations". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. August 5, 1982. p. E1.
- "Ambitious plans: Linen Chest eyes expansion in Canada, U.S.". Montreal Gazette. Montreal. 6 December 2001. p. C1.
- "Archived copy" (PDF). centrerockland.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 August 2009. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - "Mall Map". Rockland.
- TRUST, COMINAR REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT. "Centre Rockland pleased to welcome IGA". www.newswire.ca.
- Lacroix-Couture, Frédéric (July 12, 2018). "Réouverture du Linen Chest au centre Rockland".
- Lacroix-Couture, Frédéric (February 28, 2018). "Transformation de l'aire de restauration du centre Rockland".
- https://retail-insider.com/retail-insider/2019/03/rockland-centre-launches-innovative-food-destination/
- "Horaires et adresses des succursales". September 29, 2018. Archived from the original on September 29, 2018.