Toronto Life Square

Toronto Life Square

infobox shopping mall
shopping_mall_name = Toronto Life Square


location = Toronto, Ontario, Canada
opening_date = 2007 (phased)
developer = PenEquity
manager = PenEquity
owner = PenEquity
number_of_stores = 40
number_of_anchors = 4+
floor_area = 360,000 ft² (33,444 m²)
floors = 13 (10 above ground & 3 concourses) (Shopping levels to be located on Levels 1 to 4 and Concourse Level 1) (Levels 5 to 10 office space only)
website = [http://www.torontolifesquare.com www.torontolifesquare.com]
parking = N/A

Toronto Life Square (formerly Metropolis) is a retail, office and entertainment complex development on the north-east corner of the intersection of Yonge Street and Dundas Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The project was originally delayed several times, and sits on a large parcel of prime land in the city's commercial core, on the north side of Yonge-Dundas Square. It is named after the "Toronto Life" magazine.

History

The project was approved in 1998 with the opening originally planned for 2000. The land was expropriated by the City of Toronto immideately afterwards, [http://www.thestar.com/article/293729 Hume, Christopher; "Toronto Star": We don't deserve this horrorchitecture; January 14, 2008] ] and while construction boarding soon went up, the project suffered shutdowns and major delays.

Under the control of developers [http://www.penequity.com/ PenEquity] , construction finally began in 2003. A phased opening started in late 2007. The AMC Yonge & Dundas 24 (which in the early planning stages had been a 30-plex) opened on March 28, 2008, with a free small popcorn offer for every guest until April 24th, and twenty-four digital auditoriums. As per the original agreement, some cinemas are used in the morning as classrooms of Ryerson University.

Architecture

The project was built in an L-configuration around a number of existing buildings, including a parking garage belonging to the adjacent Ryerson University; in exchange for the air rights to build over its land, Ryerson gained use of the AMC theatres as classrooms during daytime hours.Fact|date=February 2007

The exterior facing Dundas Square is primarily covered with giant video screens and static billboard advertisements of various sizes. The Yonge Street facade is made up of curtainwall store fronts with a glass and steel canopy overhanging the sidewalk.

The opening of Toronto Life Square attracted little attention. However, "Toronto Star" architecture critic Christopher Hume wrote a lengthy piece in the newspaper entitled "We don't deserve this horrorchitecture," which decried the building as a "nasty dark grey bunker."

Effect on local economy and tourism

Analysts believe Toronto Life Square will likely stir new commercial and tourist growth in the Toronto downtown area.Fact|date=January 2008 The growth of commercial prosperity in other more mature commercial districts such as New York City's Times Square, London's Piccadilly Circus and Tokyo's Shibuya have served as the basis for these projections.Fact|date=January 2008

Downtown Toronto already has major shopping districts, particularly in the nearby indoor Toronto Eaton Centre shopping complex, the Yorkville area, and parts of Queen Street West. The intention of Toronto Life Square, however, was to attempt to stir development of a different type of shopping area; one that is dominated by billboards and video screens as well as high density buildings in an outdoor shopping area similar to Times Square in New York City.

[
Olympic Spirit Toronto, June, 30, 2006]

Retail

Toronto Life Square is anchored by the state-of-the-art AMC 24 Theatres, flagship Future Shop store, Adidas Sport Store and restaurants including Jack Astor's and Milestone's, which both have one-of-a-kind patio dining with a view of the busist area in Toronto. The building also boasts a unique 3rd floor food court with floor-to-ceiling windows and soft seating area as well as a variety of food options. The concourse level offers an alternate selection of food and drinks for subway riders to "grab and go."

ee also

*Shopping mall
*Entertainment Centrum

References

External links

* [http://www.torontolifesquare.com/ Toronto Life Square]
* [http://www.stjoseph.com/news/images/Press_Releases_Archive/PR_TorontoLifeSquare_April2007.pdf/ Toronto Life announcement]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Toronto Life — is a monthly Canadian magazine about entertainment, politics and life in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Established in 1966, it currently has a total readership of 863,000 and is published by St. Joseph Media, which also owns titles like the tourism… …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto — This article is about the city in Canada. For other uses, see Toronto (disambiguation). City of Toronto redirects here. For the municipal government, see municipal government of Toronto. For the historical part of the city, see Old Toronto.… …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto Pearson International Airport — This article is about the Canadian airport. For the airfield in the United States, see Pearson Field. For other airports in Toronto, see List of airports in the Greater Toronto Area. YYZ redirects here. For the instrumental by Rush, see YYZ… …   Wikipedia

  • Yonge-Dundas Square — Dundas Square …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto Zoo — The Main Entrance to the Toronto Zoo Date opened August 15, 1974 Location …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto City Hall — General information Architectural style Modernist Location …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto — Spitzname: T.O., The Big Smoke Nächtlicher Blick auf die Harbourfront und Downtown Toronto …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Toronto Police Service — Logo of the Toronto Police Service. Motto To Serve and Protect …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto subway and RT — A T series train at Sheppard–Yonge station on the Sheppard line …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto EMS — Toronto Emergency Medical Services Established 1975 Headquarters Toronto, ON …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”