Seasons signal a shift in retail

Outlet mall anchoring high-density mixed use, residential project

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 01/05/2017 (3056 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

On a retail landscape dotted with vacant big box stores, languishing malls, and growing competition online, developers need to find new angles to make their projects stand out.

So when the people behind the soon to be open 400,000-square-foot outlet mall at the corner of Kenaston Boulevard and Sterling Lyon Parkway had an opportunity to enter the Winnipeg marketplace, they took a fresh approach to the role a shopping centre can play in the community.

Blair Forster is the development manager of the 117-acre Seasons site north of Sterling Lyon between Kenaston and McCreary Road and president of Forster Projects, one half of the duo building the mixed-use destination centre.

Danielle Da Silva - Sou'wester
John Scott, senior vice-president of development with Ivanhoé Cambridge, takes media through a tour of Outlet Collection Winnipeg prior to its opening on May 3.
Danielle Da Silva - Sou'wester John Scott, senior vice-president of development with Ivanhoé Cambridge, takes media through a tour of Outlet Collection Winnipeg prior to its opening on May 3.

Saskatchewan-based Forster Projects and Harvard Developments Inc. — equal partners in the project — purchased the former CN rail intermodal terminal about four years ago.

The plot across from IKEA and Cabela’s had a lot going for it, Forster said, being fully serviced, surrounded by a good road network, and situated near some of the highest earning neighbourhoods in the city. However, the site was also neighbour to Kenaston Commons and a dozen popular stores a few blocks away.

“Most of our retail partners, the large format retailers who you need to get interest in your site to kick it off, were already represented on Kenaston,” Forster said. “It’s a densely populated retail node in the city, so we knew that if we were going to execute on this project, it had to be something different and unique.”

Outlet malls were just beginning to get a foothold in other Canadian markets at the time, and the two development agencies saw an opportunity to build something that was more than a “buying centre” — a retail outlet that you drive to, buy what you need, get back into your car and leave, Forster said.

At its completion, the Seasons area will have nearly 3,000 residential units, a grocery store, physician, a dozen restaurants, two car dealerships and a hotel, in addition to the mall.

“I think most of the major players at that time felt the Winnipeg marketplace might be too small to house a large scale fashion outlet mall, and we didn’t,” Forster said.

“There’s a significant trade area when you include portions of Ontario, the northern U.S., and Saskatchewan into Winnipeg’s draw, and we felt that we could get three million people to the site within a seven hour drive time.”

Outlet Collection Winnipeg expected to be an economic driver

…most of the major players at that time felt the Winnipeg marketplace might be too small to house a large scale fashion outlet mall, and we didn’t.
— Blair Forster

With 150,000-square-feet of leasing agreements inked between Forster, Harvard and retailers keen on joining an outlet mall in Winnipeg, Montreal-based real estate developer Ivanhoé Cambridge joined the mix, becoming an equal partner in the mall and the project lead.

Ground was broken on Outlet Collection Winnipeg (555 Sterling Lyon Parkway) on Sept. 25, 2015 and less than two years later the mall will welcome its first customers on May 3. The $200-million enclosed mall boasts up to 100 stores offering strictly factory outlet items and is anchored by new market arrivals Saks OFF 5th, F21 Red, Designer Shoe Warehouse, and the Nike Factory Store.

Ivanhoé  Cambridge also operates Outlet Collection at Niagara (in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ont.) and is building a premium outlet mall at the Edmonton International Airport, scheduled to open in 2018.

John Scott, senior vice-president of development with Ivanhoé Cambridge, said Winnipeg was previously missing outlet options in the “retail hierarchy” of the city, and while he declined to comment on the competitiveness of pricing versus U.S. counterparts, he said the merchandise won’t be lacking.

“The fact that it’s all together under one roof, the fact that it’s climate controlled is very unique, particularly to the outlet development game,” Scott said.

“Certainly the offering will be here and we fully expect that people will be very happy to stay local as opposed to travelling six and a half hours south,” he added.

 

Certainly the offering will be here and we fully expect that people will be very happy to stay local as opposed to travelling six and a half hours south.
— John Scott

Outlet Collection Winnipeg features up to 100 retailers with many opening to customers on May 3. The centre is anchored by Old Navy Outlet as well as Designer Shoe Warehouse and Saks OFF 5th.

When asked about the number of visitors anticipated in the mall’s opening months, Scott said it’s difficult to predict but expects a good response, with about 20 per cent of visitors travelling from outside of the city to check out the mall. A brand-new Hilton Garden Inn will open just east of the mall this summer, with 127 rooms and a 3,740-square-foot beer vendor, to accommodate the anticipated tourists.

“We think (Outlet Collection Winnipeg) will be extremely well received in this market, so we’re excited to see what those numbers will look like,” Scott said.

Loren Remillard, president and CEO of The Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce, said the entrance of Outlet Collection Winnipeg in the city is a bit of good news and believes the shopping centre will help grow the number of retail dollars spent in Winnipeg.

“It signifies a strong vote of confidence by the investors in the outlet mall in the Winnipeg market and surrounding market, that they can go into this venture confident that the market is there, and the interest is there, and they see good things ahead for Winnipeg,” Remillard said.

As with the arrival of IKEA and the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Remillard said visitors to Outlet Collection Winnipeg won’t be spending their money at one destination only, creating an opportunity for other retailers to get their products in front of a new audience. The boost the mall will provide to the retail tourism industry could be significant, and Remillard said he wouldn’t be surprised if he receives a call from his counterpart in Grand Forks lamenting the movement of dollars north.

“They’re bringing new retail customers to the Winnipeg market that historically had not been there,” Remillard said.

It creates a situation where high-end retailers are in the backyards of thousands of people who live in the Charleswood-Tuxedo-Whyte Ridge ward.
— Marty Morantz, city councillor

“When you bring new entries into the market, there’s opportunities for other retailers to say ‘Great, now we have more people coming to the marketplace, how do I become part of that growth in the retail tourism component,’” he said. “And that has to be the strategy for our retail sector.”

 

Select stores at Outlet Collection Winnipeg will not open until September, including Winners and F21 Red.

Scale of development is a ‘game changer’

Over his 30 years working in the industry, Forster said retail developments are becoming smaller year after year, and tenants occupy 25 per cent less floor space than decades past.

The inclusion of high-density residential and amenities, such as a grocery store on site was “critical” to make a development the scale of Seasons viable, Forster said.

“Now we’re seeing with the increased demand for online shopping, you’re seeing the bricks and mortar side of real estate start to contract a little bit,” he said. “It’s our opinion that for these projects to remain relevant they have to be mixed-use, and they have be amenity-rich, and they have to provide an entertainment aspect to the customer.”

Supplied photo
An aerial look at the Seasons development facing southwest. The Hilton Garden Inn is pictured at the far left and Outlet Collection Winnipeg is pictured at the centre. The building has a white membrane roof to reduce heat absorption. To the right, three residential developments are under construction, including a facility specializing in memory care for people with Alzheimer’s, a 10-storey 55-plus life lease building, and 416 suite luxury apartment block. To the south, about 50 acres of land remains to be developed over the next five years.
Supplied photo An aerial look at the Seasons development facing southwest. The Hilton Garden Inn is pictured at the far left and Outlet Collection Winnipeg is pictured at the centre. The building has a white membrane roof to reduce heat absorption. To the right, three residential developments are under construction, including a facility specializing in memory care for people with Alzheimer’s, a 10-storey 55-plus life lease building, and 416 suite luxury apartment block. To the south, about 50 acres of land remains to be developed over the next five years.

Brightwater Senior Living, a care home specializing in Alzheimer’s and dementia care, is set to open at 741 Sterling Lyon Pkwy. in the coming months. The three storey, 47,240-square-foot building will have 133 units, with 30 dedicated to memory care. It will also be include a private theatre and spa.

To the north, phase one of Altern Apartments’ The Summit at Seasons is set to open this summer and will offer 416 luxury suites with a clubhouse, swimming pool, and a commercial-grade fitness centre. To the west, a 10-storey concrete building geared to the 55-plus market will open in summer 2018.

When the residential build is complete, Forster expects about 4,000 people to call Seasons area home.

“It adds to the vibrancy of the shopping centre, it embeds some customers directly onto the site within walking distance of the retail, and it makes it feel more like a village than a stand alone retail project,” Forster said. “We want the nightlife there to be animated and active and we want the residents… to feel like Seasons is their home and our retailers are part of their life.”

Coun. Marty Morantz (Charleswood-Tuxedo-Whyte Ridge) said the development is a game changer for the city.

“In terms of the ward, it’s obviously a tremendous amenity,” Morantz said. “It creates a situation where high-end retailers are in the backyards of thousands of people who live in the Charleswood-Tuxedo-Whyte Ridge ward.”

Morantz was confident incoming traffic through the area could be handled through infrastructure investments and the City’s new traffic management centre and offered few critiques of the project, calling it a perfect use of the land.

Supplied photo
Blair Forster, president of Forster Projects, is a 50/50 partner in the Seasons development with Harvard Developments Inc.
Supplied photo Blair Forster, president of Forster Projects, is a 50/50 partner in the Seasons development with Harvard Developments Inc.

“If you turn the clock back 15 or 20 years none of that was there,” he said. “I really do think that from the City’s perspective building the right infrastructure and improving our road system is what creates the environment for all of this to happen.”

Forster said work will continue on the site for the foreseeable future and 100,000-square-feet of building permit applications will be processed over the next couple of months. The 50 remaining acres to be developed will take about five years to complete.

“There’s 400,000-square-feet left to build on the site, and if we can do 100,000-square-feet a year I think that is good momentum,” Forster said.

Facebook.com/TheSouwesterWPG
Twitter: @SouwesterWPG

Report Error Submit a Tip

The Sou'wester

LOAD MORE