Thanks! I'm having some difficulty picturing the leather shop in the old Bay Concourse at Union.
Here’s the picture, according to my mind’s eyeball:
You head up the ramp before leaving the Bay Concourse proper (we didn’t know it as that back then, did we?) and on your right you pass the lineups of the McDonald’s stand and convenience store (remember the patties and popcorn? The owners now run the Union TTC Gateway, methinks.)
On your left was the juice place and a busy Mr Sub, and then you move into the next space. Recall the LCBO on your left? You had to go down some steps to enter, as with the Leather shop on the right also. It was actually quite big, and I’d love to know where the owners went: they were nice to me and the wallet I last got there served me well. I recall the gent there as Franco but hey, I’m fuzzy on names.
Further on your right next to the leather shop, IIRC, was the pizza joint. People would line up into the passageway for a cheap slice or even a whole pie (for like five bucks?). That dough was never spun above a pizzerio’s head- it had little holes in the crust (as if rolled in a machine) but was just fine. The owner also ran the cell phone accessory shop in the Great Hall and for a while sold the tickets for the Northlander. It was he who told me Union commuters at the time would not sufficiently patronize a shop with high end merchandise.
Further into the “VIA Arrivals” area was, clockwise from the left, a video arcade, the Crossant Tree with a few tables, the Travelers Aid booth, access to car rental agencies (and lockers, before 9/11), same West stairs up to the Great Hall, glass doors to somewhere, the tunnel to Royal York, ramps to Front and Commuters with zero craft beers, I bet.
Cheers!