The Oakville household base along the Queen Elizabeth Way corridor in Halton Region produces one of the highest per-capita retail spending profiles in Ontario, and Oakville Place, the 453,000 square foot enclosed mall opened in 1981 on Oakville’s commercial strip, reflects that demographic through its concentration of Canadian-identity retailers: Roots, the Toronto-founded apparel and lifestyle brand; Purdys Chocolatier, the Vancouver-founded chocolate brand; and Tim Hortons, whose presence in every Canadian community retail format signals essential daily visit frequency from the surrounding residential base. The property serves the Oakville, Burlington, and south Mississauga household as the primary enclosed comparison-shopping format for the western Halton residential market.
Sephora and Benefit Cosmetics BrowBar serve the prestige beauty category. Best Buy anchors the electronics retail category. H&M, Bluenotes, La Vie en Rose, Laura and Melanie Lyne, Olsen, and Garage serve the accessible and women’s fashion floor. L.L. Bean gives the property an outdoor and lifestyle anchor that the Oakville lakefront and recreational consumer recognizes. Sport Chek covers the sporting goods category. Mark’s and Tip Top serve the Canadian workwear and menswear floor.
The full Canadian telecom cluster of Bell, Fido, Freedom Mobile, Rogers, TELUS, WIRELESSWAVE, and WOW! Mobile gives the property a mobile services concentration that confirms its community services role in the Oakville residential market. Shoppers Drug Mart anchors the pharmacy and health category. The property’s role in the Oakville retail landscape is the QEW corridor community mall: a format whose Canadian-identity retail anchors, from Roots to Tim Hortons and Purdys, give the Oakville household a branded Canadian shopping experience at a scale and format no competing Halton enclosed property currently matches.
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