Pacific Centre

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

CF Centre
File:Pacific-ctr.jpg
Location Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Opening date 1971
Management Cadillac Fairview
Owner Cadillac Fairview
No. of stores and services 83
No. of anchor tenants 4
Total retail floor area 1,037,518 ft²
No. of floors 3
Parking 1758
Website Pacific Centre

CF Pacific Centre is a shopping mall located in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is operated by Cadillac Fairview Corporation. Based on the number of stores, most of which are underground, it is the largest mall in Downtown Vancouver with over 100 stores and shops. Anchor stores include Holt Renfrew, Apple Store, Harry Rosen and H&M. In 2015, Nordstrom opened a new flagship store.

The mall is directly connected to Hudson's Bay department store, Vancouver Centre Mall, two SkyTrain subway stations, and the Four Seasons Hotel – a 5-star 385-room luxury hotel.

The City of Vancouver approved an 578,000 sq ft. expansion of Pacific Centre, including retail premises that will extend to the street on both sides of West Georgia Street, and a direct link connecting the shopping centre with the new Vancouver City Centre SkyTrain station on Granville Street. The link opened in the summer of 2009 in conjunction with the opening of the Canada Line.

History

Built between 1971 to 1973, it was an unofficial Eaton Centre, which was home to an Eaton's store and succeeded by Sears Canada after 2002 and vacated in the fall of 2012.[1] But a Nordstrom store opened in its former space in 2015.

Incident

In 2012, an incident at Pacific Centre Mall sparked an investigation by the Ministry of Justice and the Vancouver police.[2] A security guard was shown on videotape striking a disabled man suspected of shoplifting, throwing him from his wheelchair on the floor and yelling profane language.[3] The guard in question — Ali Rahnumah, 30, an employee of Genesis Security — was fired over the incident and criminally charged.[4][5] He is suing Genesis Security for wrongful dismissal.[4] The investigation itself ultimately concluded that the guard acted with unnecessary force and had used profanity contrary to the Security Services Regulation of that province.[6]

Anchor tenants

(square footage is approximate)

Former Anchors

  • Sears (600,000 sq ft. over 7 levels) – closed; replaced by Nordstrom in 2015
  • Eaton's - closed 2002; was replaced by Sears in 2003

See also

References

External links

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.