The South Shore of Montreal, where Brossard’s Quartier Portobello development has accommodated a growing Moroccan, Algerian, Chinese-Canadian, and broader immigrant household population whose commercial needs the Boulevard Taschereau corridor serves through a mix of chain and independent operators specific to these communities’ daily provisioning and cultural goods purchasing culture, gives Place Portobello a regional mall trade area whose tenant mix reflects the multicultural character of the Brossard South Shore market. Les saveurs de Casablanca gives the property a Moroccan and North African food identity for the Brossard Francophone Maghrebi household’s specialty ingredient and prepared foods purchasing occasion. Aliments Shing Hing gives the property a Chinese-Canadian specialty grocery identity. Wing Hing serves the Chinese cuisine dining occasion for the South Shore Chinese-Canadian household. Jean Coutu anchors the Quebec pharmacy and health category. Canada Computers and Electronics serves the technology retail category.
Linen Chest Brossard serves the home goods and textile category. Foot Locker serves the athletic footwear category. Second Cup Café serves the Canadian specialty coffee and café occasion. Dollarama serves the value and household essentials category. Sebag and Bijouterie Princesse d’Or serve the fine jewelry floor. Fleuriste Le Magnolia gives the property a florist and gifting identity. Saint Cinnamon serves the specialty baked goods and café category. Tabagie Place Portobello serves the convenience and lottery retail category.
The property’s commercial role in the Brossard South Shore is the Taschereau Boulevard community regional mall: a Jean Coutu-Canada Computers pharmacy and electronics anchor whose Les saveurs de Casablanca Moroccan community food identity, Aliments Shing Hing Chinese-Canadian grocery, and Wing Hing Chinese dining give the Brossard multicultural South Shore household a co-tenancy of practical daily-needs and culturally specific community retail whose catchment depth reflects the ethnic diversity of the Quartier Portobello and Boulevard Taschereau residential corridor.
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