Park Lane (mall) explained

Park Lane
Address:5657 Spring Garden Road
Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3J 3R4
Coordinates:44.6428°N -63.5783°W
Opening Date:1988
Owner:Universal Properties
Number Of Stores:40+
Floor Area:120463square feet
Floors:3
Parking:440[1]
Publictransit:Halifax Transit (routes 1, 8, 9+, 10, 14, 123, 185)

Park Lane is a three-storey shopping mall with 40+ shops in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.[2] It is located on Spring Garden Road and is owned by Universal Properties.

Overview

Park Lane is located on Spring Garden Road in Halifax. Parking is available at a parking garage attached to the shopping centre. Park Lane was built in 1988, and opened that same year.[3] A 1999 paper in the Canadian Journal of Urban Research called it the "premier fashion mall" in the city.

The mall is located underneath a seven-storey office tower called Park Lane Terraces, which comprises 109856square feet of office space arranged around an atrium looking down into the shopping centre.[4]

History

The plan in 1986 was for a $50-million building to be available by mid-1988, including office, retail and parking space, with Famous Players as a central tenant for six of twelve proposed cinemas. Robert McAlpine Ltd was contracted for the construction. The initial investors were Halifax Developments Ltd and Atlantic Shopping Centres Ltd, which as of 1991 remained co-owners of the mall.[5] [6] [7] The two companies subsequently merged, and later became Crombie REIT, who put the mall up for sale in 2014.[8]

The Famous Players cineplex, the original anchor tenant at Park Lane, was called the "most ambitious multiple screen venue" in Halifax by Cinema Canada, and it more than doubled the number of screens in the city.[9] It was purchased by Empire Theatres in 2004 and renovated. Empire was subsequently sold to the Cineplex Entertainment chain, and the cineplex was accordingly rebranded once again.[10] [11]

The northern part of the mall originally comprised an eight-storey structure (a parking garage atop the retail levels) designed to accommodate the construction of a second tower on top at a later date. An 11-storey residential tower, called the Martello, was constructed at a cost of $22 million on top of the car park and opened in 2005.

In June 2018, Park Lane was sold by Crombie REIT to Halifax-based Universal Realty Group.[12]

Some scenes from season 4 of The Sinner were filmed here.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Park Lane Parking Rates. Park Lane Mall. Crombie Properties. 16 August 2018.
  2. Web site: About Park Lane. Park Lane Mall. Crombie Properties. 13 August 2014.
  3. Bunting, Trudi E; Millward, Hugh (June 1999). "A tale of two CBDs II: the internal retail dynamics of downtown Halifax and downtown Kitchener", Canadian Journal of Urban Research 8 (1): 1–27.
  4. Web site: Park Lane Terraces Fact Sheet. Crombie Properties. 13 August 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140814021425/http://www.halifaxdevelopments.com/images/HDL-ParkLaneTerraces.pdf. 14 August 2014. dead.
  5. [The Canadian Press]
  6. Curren, Reg (November 1987). "Retailers in Expansionary Mood", Atlantic Business 6 (6): 22.
  7. Green, Morris. "Halifax retail complexes are changing". Financial Post. July 31, 1991. p. 10.
  8. Taylor, Roger. "Crombie REIT ‘sympathetic’ to Cogswell redevelopment". The Chronicle Herald. May 15, 2014. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
  9. News: Majka. Chris. Eastern Wave. 13 August 2014. Cinema Canada. March 1988. 73.
  10. News: Empire Company Announces Sale of Empire Theatres. 13 August 2014. CNW Group. 27 June 2013.
  11. Zaccagna, Remo. "Park Lane Mall soon to be sold". The Chronicle Herald. January 30, 2014. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
  12. Book: 2018 Annual Report . 2019 . Crombie REIT . 29.
  13. Web site: Venn. Lydia. 2022. These are all the real life filming locations from season four of The Sinner. 2022-02-24. UK. en-GB.