The Shops on Steeles and 404
Location | Markham, Ontario, Canada |
---|---|
Coordinates | 43°48′48″N 79°21′30″W / 43.813206°N 79.358438°W |
Opening date | 1977 |
Management | Wycliffe Property Management |
No. of stores and services | 70 |
No. of anchor tenants | 1 |
No. of floors | 2 |
Parking | outdoor street level and above former Sears (closed off) |
Public transit access | TTC 51 Leslie, 53 Steeles East, and 25 Don Mills; YRT 3 Thornhill and 90 Leslie |
Website | www |
The Shops on Steeles and 404 is a small 70-store community mall at the corner of Steeles Avenue East and Don Mills Road in Markham, Ontario. Aside from a few chains, the mall is mostly independent stores.
History
[edit]Shops on Steeles and 404 originally opened in 1977 as Markham Place, and was owned by Cadillac Fairview. In recent years, Wycliffe Property Management operated the mall until last year where it was sold. Original tenants included McDonalds, Subway, Miracle Mart, and the now defunct Sears Canada which used to be a major anchor. Sears Canada originally operated as a full line Sears, then as a Sears Home (selling furniture and appliances) and in recent years as a Sears Outlet, but closed in April 2017. Within the former Sears now operates an Active Green + Ross Tire & Automative Centre, which was formerly occupied by a Sears Auto Centre as part of a deal Sears Canada secured with Active Green + Ross Tire & Automative in 2004. Bobby's Liquidation Outlet occupied the anchor tenant space vacated by Sears. A liquidation outlet called Closeout King was located within the anchor building but was removed after five months of non-payment. In January 2019 Bobby's Outlet closed (moved to Promenade Mall in Vaughan) with mall owners planning to re-develop the space.[1]
In 2007, the mall was slated for residential re-development called Markhamgate Summit,[2] with some retail stores at ground level, as well as a new transit hub for the Toronto Transit Commission and York Region Transit.[3] Although the land is in Markham, Ontario (in the community of Thornhill, Ontario), Toronto city councillor David Shiner invoked the 1974 Agreement, which grants Toronto limited planning authority over York Region land that is within 45 metres of Steeles Avenue, which Toronto owns, to veto the developer plans of several condominium towers. Shiner argued that the proposed number of residential units was too high which would create too much traffic in the neighborhood, while Markham councillor Howard Ian Shore and the developer countered that the project would not be viable if the number of residential units was lowered below the agreed-upon figure.[4] As of 2018, the project has not proceeded and the original mall remains standing and operating.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Bobby's Liquidation Outlet closing, 80% off store inventory in Markham".
- ^ "Major new "Markhamgate Summit" development planned for Steeles and the 404". Archived from the original on 2017-03-24. Retrieved 2017-03-23.
- ^ "Date set for Shops on Steeles redevelopment". 4 October 2010.
- ^ Alcoba, Natalie (26 March 2011). "Who's afraid of Shops on Steeles?". National Post.