Commerce Place (Edmonton) Explained

Commerce Place
Former Names:CityCentre (1990–1994)[1]
Address:10155 102 Street NW
Edmonton, Alberta
T5J 4G8
Coordinates:53.5414°N -113.4947°W
Map Type:Canada Edmonton
Start Date:1987
Completion Date:1990
Opening:January 1990
Building Type:Office, retail
Roof:124.97m (410.01feet)
Floor Count:30
Cost:$165 million (CAD)
Floor Area:753956square feet
Architect:Adamson Associates
Schmidt Feldberg Croll Henderson Architects
Main Contractor:EllisDon
Developer:Olympia and York
Owner:British Columbia Investment Management Corporation
Management:QuadReal
Public Transit: 102 Street stop

Commerce Place is an office and retail complex in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The complex's skyscraper stands at 125m (410feet) or 27 storeys tall and was completed in 1990.[2] Commerce Place has a small selection of shops in the main levels of the mall[3] and is connected to Edmonton City Centre and Manulife Place by pedway.[4]

Commerce Place is also home to the Edmonton Consular Post, a satellite of the Italian Consulate in Vancouver.[5]

History

In December 1986, Toronto-based developer Olympia and York revealed that they had acquired property north of Jasper Avenue and south of Manulife Place between 101 and 102 Street.[6] The following year, Olympia and York announced plans for an 1.35 million square foot project, then called CityCentre, in downtown Edmonton that would consist of twin skyscrapers and a shopping mall. The project would be built in phases with 1.2 million square foot in office space and 150,000 square foot of retail space planned.[7] Construction of phase one began in fall 1987 with the 27-storey skyscraper opening in January 1990.[2] The complex's shopping mall was planned to open in the spring of 1990. However due to the lack of tenants, the mall's opening was delayed numerous times before it was put off until the fall of 1991.[8] [2] [9] In 1992, Olympia and York went bankrupt and in June 1993 sold the complex to Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. Plans for phase two which would had incorporated the CIBC branch at the corner of 101 Street and Jasper Avenue and construct a second skyscraper were put on hold indefinitely due to the slump of the commercial real estate market at the time.[10] The complex was renamed Commerce Place in January 1994.[11]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE . Forgotten Edmonton . 17 February 2023.
  2. News: Staples, David . Absent tenants stall mall opening . Edmonton Journal . August 15, 1990 . B1 . November 30, 2024 . Newspapers.com.
  3. Web site: The Shops at Commerce Place | Retail . Commerce Place . March 28, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220328093741/http://www.shopcommerceplace.com/retail.html . dead.
  4. Web site: Edmonton Downtown Pedway Map . City of Edmonton . November 30, 2024 . November 30, 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20241130211602/https://www.edmonton.ca/sites/default/files/public-files/assets/PDF/DowntownPedwayMap.pdf . live.
  5. Web site: The Consular network . Ambasciata d'Italia Ottawa . November 20, 2024 . April 17, 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240417230634/https://ambottawa.esteri.it/en/chi-siamo/la-rete-consolare/ . live.
  6. News: Tait, Cam . Jasper Avenue plan praised . Edmonton Journal . December 21, 1986 . D15 . November 30, 2024 . Newspapers.com.
  7. News: Thorne, Duncan . Province to be major tenant in massive twin-tower project . Edmonton Journal . April 3, 1987 . D2 . November 30, 2024 . Newspapers.com.
  8. News: Chalmers, Ron . O & Y mall will be upscale . . February 3, 1990 . D1 . November 30, 2024 . Newspapers.com.
  9. News: Staples . David . Sadava . Mike . Mall delays opening — again . Edmonton Journal . January 30, 1991 . B1 . November 30, 2024 . Newspapers.com.
  10. News: MacDonald, Jac . Cash-strapped O&Y sells CityCentre to CIBC . Edmonton Journal . June 13, 1993 . D9 . November 30, 2024 . Newspapers.com.
  11. News: Chalmers, Ron . New name for City-Centre . Edmonton Journal . December 3, 1993 . F8 . November 30, 2024 . Newspapers.com.