Oakridge Centre Expansion Scaled Back

Craig Patterson
Craig Patterson
Now located in Toronto, Craig is a retail analyst and consultant at the Retail Council of Canada. He's also the Director of Applied Research at the University of Alberta School of Retailing in Edmonton. He has studied the Canadian retail landscape for the past 25 years and he holds Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of Laws Degrees. He is also President & CEO of Vancouver-based Retail Insider Media Ltd.

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Original Oakridge plans. Source: Ivanhoé CambridgeOriginal Oakridge plans. Source: Ivanhoé Cambridge

Original Oakridge plans. Source: Ivanhoé Cambridge

A proposed second-level retail expansion at Vancouver’s Oakridge Centre is no longer progressing as planned, after landlord Ivanhoé Cambridge discovered an underground aquifer beneath the mall site. An expansion is still in the works for Oakridge, though smaller than originally anticipated.

The massive $1.5 billion project would have seen the complex expand to a total of 4.6 million square feet, including several tall residential towers and other uses above an expanded shopping centre. An expansion will still happen, but with 450 fewer residential units and less retail, spanning a total of about 3.5 million square feet. 

The mall’s retail component was originally supposed to grow by approximately 800,000 square feet, including a new second-floor retail level and a new department store anchor at its south end that was rumoured to possibly be a Saks Fifth Avenue or Bloomingdale’s. The second floor retail would have seen the existing 574,000 square foot mall expanded to about 1.365 million square feet, making it British Columbia’s second-largest mall after Metropolis at Metrotown. Ivanhoé Cambridge confirms that a ground-level westward expansion is still planned for Oakridge, though the mall will no longer gain a second retail level. 


Original 2012 plan, via Henriquez Partners ArchetectsOriginal 2012 plan, via Henriquez Partners Archetects

Original 2012 plan, via Henriquez Partners Archetects

Ivanhoé Cambridge says that a recently discovered aquifer beneath the site is to blame, though the company also said that there would be difficulties keeping tenants on board during the planned eight years of construction. Now that plans for a second retail level have been scrapped, retailers will be able to continue to operate on the mall’s ground floor while the scaled-back residential construction progresses above. 


Updated 2014 planUpdated 2014 plan

Updated 2014 plan

Oakridge Centre is considered to be Vancouver’s most prestigious suburban mall, with freestanding locations for upscale retailers such as Tiffany & Co., Hugo Boss, Max Mara, and Rolex (at Montecristo Jewellers). The centre is anchored by a 182,000 square foot Hudson’s Bay and a 50,000 square foot Safeway grocery store. Target was originally supposed to move in to replace the mall’s former Zellers, though that was cancelled when Target shuttered its Canadian operations last year. 

Oakridge Centre is one of North America’s most productive shopping centres, with sales estimated to be $1,533 per square foot annually. Later this month, we’ll be releasing our newest study ranking Canada’s most productive malls in terms of sales per square foot.

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web: January 13, 2016 



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