Saturday, January 20, 2024
Time for a New Manitoba Flag?
Monday, January 15, 2024
Will Dinner Theatre Ever Return?
For the first time in decades, Winnipeg has no dinner theatre. It has been some time since Celebrations has closed. A combination of years of Covid, rising inflation and a union strike made theatre owners throw in the towel. It remains to be seen whether a private theatre serving dinner will ever be able to get off the ground again in Winnipeg.
Monday, January 8, 2024
Thom Bargen Coffee Coming to Tuxedo
Tuxedo used to be a town before being absorbed into the city. It didn't have a very big commercial area but what it did have was on Corydon and had enough to support the residential area.
A Safeway and a Shopper's Drug Mart anchor a retail mall and the far end of it is Winnipeg's oldest and most resilient comedy club Rumors.
A retail mall across the street has provided a host of services and restaurants over the years and for the most part has been fairly stable in what businesses are there. For example there has been a Perth's drycleaner there for decades. Till recently, the Tuxedo Family Restaurant was a staple but controversy over pandemic regulations likely contributed to it closing. A Winnipeg favourite George's Burgers & Subs has taken over and appears to be quite busy.
In 1992, the corner location which had been a hair salon for many years was taken over by a franchise of Grabbajabba. It was an opportunity for many in the area to buy coffee beans for their new machines at home but also a place to sit down, have a coffee, latte and the like with windows all around. Musical artists would play Fridays and Saturdays. The patio came a year later and was a popular spot for dog walkers and bikes.
Th coffee shop lasted several years before Timothy's World Coffee took over and until this year had served the community. The closure was likely disappointing to many who had gotten used to a coffee place on the corner. A Starbucks in the mall at least was still available but often fairly busy.
It must have come as a relief when Thom Bargen Coffee announced they would be taking over and adding to the three locations they already have on Kennedy, Sherbrook and further down Corydon in the Fort Rouge area. The ten year old company is truly a Winnipeg institution and the opportunity to be in a place with patio and parking as well as walkable was likely to go pass up.
It is always tough to run a restaurant business. Many have had tough times these last years. It doesn't matter if it is a franchise or someone's family place. However, we have seen a few close and a few go up in their place. Some areas such as downtown still struggle as they cope with lost customers who no longer live or work in the area. Foot traffic has dried up in many years. Some from endless construction, bike paths on their street that block easier access and crime.
The Tuxedo Mall across has had a makeover in the last few years for its facade as well as the Safeway. The Shell station is gone in favour of an apartment building going up. The parking lot is always filled. This is an important thing to note. The area has always been a mix of recreation, residential, commercial and retail. Vacancies come up from time to time but this particular area has been resilient.
Thom Bargen should have good success in Tuxedo. And not just because of wealthy customers but because the area draws people every day for everything from groceries to dentists.
As 2024 progresses, we are likely to see more vacancies filled, especially within areas that have shown consistent abilities in drawing people. The more people, the more secure an area feels. And not just feels, actually is. Many stores and businesses in the Tuxedo area are open till 11 PM on most nights and early every day.
Will this be the last expansion for Thom Bargen? Maybe yes, maybe no. With 10 employees at the new Tuxedo location and not being crazy large, this could be a template for other areas. The problem is that some of those ideal places might just have too high rent. It is a mystery why some landlords don't lower rent to get places filled.
Business announcement have been happening fairly regularly so perhaps we have started to emerge of those tough years,
Sunday, January 7, 2024
Long and McQuade to Move to Polo Park Area
Long and McQuade, a Canadian national music store, started off pretty small for its Winnipeg location. They were the third location in Canada to open in 1971 and took over Winnipeg Piano, a city institution on Portage. Business boomed at Long and McQuade moved to Osborne the following year. By 1978, they had moved to Corydon.
My impression of Corydon was that it wasn't a big store but I was not sure how deep the store went or if it included a basement. One thing is clear is that the move to Stafford was one of constant expansion as they took over large swaths of the old Videon building in 1997 until there was little left that they didn't operate from. The move to Pembina Highway was a purpose-built store of 25,000 square feet in 2016.
There are three locations in the city now at Wall Street, Henderson Highway and Pembina Highway. It is the Wall Street location that is moving to Polo Park because there is very little room to expand at their present location. At one point there was a very music shops all along Portage and Wall Street but pretty much the only one left is St. John's Music. The Pembina location boasted it had the largest curved wall of guitars in the world. At 400 guitars, they might be right.
The old Wall Street location used to be Gorden Price/Mother's Music and became a Long and McQuade in 1993 and full renovation in 2014. Mother's Music used to be right across from University of Winnipeg in the 1980s.
The Henderson Highway location is fairly new at 2019. It was a former location of River City Sports. Henderson Highway is filled with music stores.
The location for the relocated Wall Street/Polo Park location is on Ellice just east of Empress Street. It is a multi-million purchase of the whole 9 acres and 120,000 square foot building where Long and McQuade will occupy 50,000 square feet of what is presently Bianca Amor's Liquidation Supercentre.
In 2007, the whole complex was purchased by Cabela from Sidney I. Robinson who used to operate S.I.R. Warehouse, a business not dissimilar to Cabela's. Prior to that, the building was used by MTS for their fleet vehicles.
Much of the area around Polo Park was industrial right up to the 1980s.
For those wondering what happens to Bianca Amor's, it has found a smaller spot on St. James.
The new Long and McQuade's is modelled after Halifax and Calgary which feature a store and distribution centre. The company has quite a bit of product going from place to place and at 50,000 square feet of space, the new Polo Park location can handle that.
This is a massive investment in the city and evidence that music lessons and musical instruments are big business. There isn't a company that I know of quite as coast to coast in their field as Long and McQuade. An employee increase for the people hired for the distribution centre and for music lessons is guaranteed. Total numbers are not known. And of course, the construction and millions spent will help the economy here in 2024.
Saturday, January 6, 2024
John Sauder Retires from CBC Broadcasting
Friday, January 5, 2024
Fit 4 Less St. James Opens Soon
Fit 4 Less is indeed part of Goodlife Fitness but it is the discount arm for the company and membership is not interchangeable. Unlike Goodlife, Fit 4 Less offers more limited staff hours, no classes and trainers and only a few amenities like tanning, massage chairs and hydro beds. It is open 24 hours with a card pass but showers are closed when no staff are around.
The pandemic was not kind to the fitness industry. Many Snap and Anytime Fitness Clubs were closed permanently. Many Goodlife Fitness locations were slow to re-open or complete their building. Some of their locations closed as well or were changes to Fit 4 Less.
The St. James location will bring the the number of Fit 4 Less in Winnipeg to three locations. One of the more prominent locations of the company is at St. Vital Mall.
Since the pandemic many new apartment buildings have been adding amenities such a fitness centres but plenty of places still don't have them nor maintain them if they do. And few offer 24 hour service. In other words: There is a need for them across Canada.
The grocery locations for Goodlife have served them well over the decades. But the big premium locations often stand alone. The old Goodlife on Kenaston is about to become a gym again. No word on the new name but will report when more is known.
The gyms re-opening and new ones coming is a sign the pandemic is being put behind many people. However, make no mistake it changed the industry. Reserving a group exercise spot and not crowding space remains in place. It changed some people's workouts to home units as well. But for the most part, gyms are coming back. It it still an open question if we see a bunch of Snap and Anytime Fitness places to pop up all over again.
As for St. James: Have we see the last of the Goodlifes in the region? I'd say no. Expect something bigger coming.