JasonParis
Moderator
I'd think so just based on anecdotal evidence. It's appeared pretty-darn empty since No Frills opened.
But it's been dead like that for years - why now?I'd think so just based on anecdotal evidence. It's appeared pretty-darn empty since No Frills opened.
I'm curious if their closure is due to poor sales, or if being evicted / lease expiry.
Acura was supposed to move last December and is going to do so VERY soon. The (ghastly) development proposal is far from being approved and has just gone to the OMB. It was slammed by the Design Review panel and the Neighbourhood Association is very much opposed as it is simply too large/dense for the site and the neighbourhood.When I was there I asked if it was because of the condo proposal that's been plastered to the front of the building for a few years. She said yes. I presume that also means the end is nigh for the Acura dealership, especially since they have a new one in the works as it is.
The Apparently some sweet deals coming up in the next couple weeks, too, which probably amounts to them trying to be competitive with No Frills for the first time since it opened.
and the 'fresh' vegetables are not!It's true - 25% off everything with some exceptions. Stuff is already fairly picked through, but I anticipate the discount will be increasing closer to closing day.
Also, they've stopped selling fresh meat, unsurprisingly.
Yeah whoever wrote the story clearly had some extra zeros on his figures. I believe it's somewhere between $26,000 and $50,000. The original surface was $22,000 when they installed it a few years ago.
Ok, good, I'm not crazy. I read that and laughed, I tweeted about it a few days back but nobody had any thoughts on the real value. There *no* way that surface, nice as it is, could cost anywhere near $50 million. To put that into context, the entire St. Lawrence North Market redevelopment is currently budgeted at just over $90 million.
But it's been dead like that for years - why now?
I don't play much basketball, but the new surface doesn't look nearly as good as the original one in my opinion. That said, it looks like it's now painted on, so at least if a cop decides to drive on it again, it shouldn't get torn to pieces.
No Frills is cheap, no doubt, but it can be a soul-sucking dingy shopping experience, especially when they don't open enough cash registers -- and what's with that one single 8-item express line? It's always lined up, don't they understand that people downtown who walk to grocery stores go more often and buy fewer items at a time?
Insert your chip, insert your chip. NO! I will tap damn it!I rarely use the "express line" because I learnt a long time ago that it's not the number of items but the time that it takes to process a transaction that is the biggest reason why a line moves slowly. Obviously, the processing time is the same whether someone has 1 item or 30 items. The express line usually has the most people in it and because of this, very often the other lines will move faster.
What I don't understand is why the cashiers don't encourage people to "tap" their credit and debit cards. This greatly speeds up the processing time and would help everyone!