Freiman Mall: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(9 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Shopping arcade in Ottawa, Ontario}} |
|||
{{Infobox shopping mall |
{{Infobox shopping mall |
||
| name = Freiman Mall |
| name = Freiman Mall |
||
| image = Freiman-Mall-Entrance-Ottawa-1.jpg |
| image = Freiman-Mall-Entrance-Ottawa-1.jpg |
||
| image_width = |
| image_width = |
||
| caption = Freiman Mall entrance at 73 Rideau Street |
| caption = Freiman Mall entrance at 73 Rideau Street |
||
| address = 73 Rideau Street<br />[[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]]<br />K1N 5W8 |
| address = 73 Rideau Street<br />[[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]]<br />K1N 5W8 |
||
Line 18: | Line 19: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
'''Freiman Mall''' (French: ''Mall Freiman'') is an enclosed [[arcade (architecture)|arcade]] between [[Rideau Street|Rideau]] and George Streets in [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]], Canada, east of [[Sussex Drive]] and west of William Street. The adjacent [[Hudson's Bay (retailer)|Hudson's Bay]] department store abuts the Freiman Mall on both its north and south sides, and can be accessed from the Freiman Mall interior in [[downtown Ottawa]]. |
'''Freiman Mall''' (French: ''Mall Freiman'') is an enclosed shopping [[arcade (architecture)|arcade]] between [[Rideau Street|Rideau]] and George Streets in [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]], Canada, east of [[Sussex Drive]] and west of William Street. The adjacent [[Hudson's Bay (retailer)|Hudson's Bay]] department store abuts the Freiman Mall on both its north and south sides, and can be accessed from the Freiman Mall interior in [[downtown Ottawa]]. |
||
==History== |
==History== |
||
[[File:A.J. Freiman on Rideau, Ottawa.jpg|thumb|left|A.J. Freiman on Rideau, 1938]] |
[[File:A.J. Freiman on Rideau, Ottawa.jpg|thumb|left|A.J. Freiman on Rideau, 1938]] |
||
[[File:Mosgrove Street Rideau Ottawa 1938.jpg|thumb|left|Mosgrove Street, from Rideau, 1938]] |
[[File:Mosgrove Street Rideau Ottawa 1938.jpg|thumb|left|Mosgrove Street, from Rideau, 1938]] |
||
The current location of the Freiman Mall was once a public street called Mosgrove Street, located immediately to the east of the [[Freimans]] department store which was adjacent to the [[ByWard Market]] and the former [[ |
The current location of the Freiman Mall was once a public street called Mosgrove Street, located immediately to the east of the [[Freimans]] department store which was adjacent to the [[ByWard Market]] and the former [[Metropolitan Stores#The Rideau Street store|Metropolitan]] department store. The street was later renamed Freiman Street after the department store and its founder, [[Archibald Jacob Freiman]]. The Freimans department store was acquired by the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] (HBC) in 1972 and rebranded as an outlet of the company's (then) "The Bay" chain.<ref name=Ottawa>{{cite web|title=Report Ref N°: ACS2004-CCS-PEC-0014|url=http://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/pec/2005/01-11/ACS2004-CCS-PEC-0014.htm|author=Planning and Environment Committee|work=City of Ottawa|access-date=23 May 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140309191613/http://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/pec/2005/01-11/ACS2004-CCS-PEC-0014.htm|archive-date=9 March 2014|date=2 December 2004|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Our History|url=http://www.hbc.com/en/history.html|publisher=[[Hudson's Bay Company]]|access-date=23 May 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130528020925/http://www.hbc.com/en/history.html|archive-date=28 May 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
||
In conjunction with the development of the [[Rideau Centre]] across the street, the City of Ottawa agreed in 1981 to close Freiman Street and to lease the land to the HBC for a term of 99 years in exchange for the construction of an enclosed, public pedestrian passageway connecting Rideau Street to George Street and the [[ByWard Market]], to be open 24 hours per day. Under the terms of the lease, HBC was entitled to install three kiosks related to its store within the new Freiman Mall. The company and the city would share operating and security costs, with the |
In conjunction with the development of the [[Rideau Centre]] across the street, the City of Ottawa agreed in 1981 to close Freiman Street and to lease the land to the HBC for a term of 99 years in exchange for the construction of an enclosed, public pedestrian passageway connecting Rideau Street to George Street and the [[ByWard Market]], to be open 24 hours per day. Under the terms of the lease, HBC was entitled to install three kiosks related to its store within the new Freiman Mall. The company and the city would share operating and security costs, with the city's share based on the proportion of public (non-retail) floor area and the amount of time the mall would be open past the store's operating hours.<ref name="Ottawa"/> |
||
The Freiman Mall was officially opened by Ottawa mayor [[Marion Dewar]] on May 12, 1983, at which time a [[commemorative plaque]] was unveiled within the mall honouring A. J. Freiman and his family.<ref>{{cite news|title=You are invited to the Official Opening of the Freiman Mall|newspaper=[[Ottawa Citizen]]|date=7 May 1983}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Middleton|first=Janice|title=Much-honored businessman, Lawrence Freiman, dies|newspaper=[[Ottawa Citizen]]|date=30 December 1986}}</ref> |
The Freiman Mall was officially opened by Ottawa mayor [[Marion Dewar]] on May 12, 1983, at which time a [[commemorative plaque]] was unveiled within the mall honouring A. J. Freiman and his family.<ref>{{cite news|title=You are invited to the Official Opening of the Freiman Mall|newspaper=[[Ottawa Citizen]]|date=7 May 1983}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Middleton|first=Janice|title=Much-honored businessman, Lawrence Freiman, dies|newspaper=[[Ottawa Citizen]]|date=30 December 1986}}</ref> |
||
In order to reduce the |
In order to reduce the city's share of the operating and security costs, the lease was amended in 1992 to allow HBC to encroach into the Freiman Mall with its merchandise displays, as long as a minimum {{convert|6.1|m|adj=on}}-wide public passageway was maintained. So as to reduce security costs, the lease amendment also allowed the company to close the Freiman Mall during a portion of the night.<ref name="Ottawa"/> |
||
==References== |
==References== |
||
Line 40: | Line 41: | ||
[[Category:Hudson's Bay Company]] |
[[Category:Hudson's Bay Company]] |
||
[[Category:1983 establishments in Ontario]] |
[[Category:1983 establishments in Ontario]] |
||
{{Ottawa-stub}} |
|||
{{Ontario-struct-stub}} |
Latest revision as of 19:56, 4 November 2022
Coordinates | 45°25′34″N 75°41′35″W / 45.426°N 75.693°W |
---|---|
Address | 73 Rideau Street Ottawa, Ontario K1N 5W8 |
Opening date | May 12, 1983 |
Developer | Viking Rideau |
Owner | Hudson's Bay Company |
No. of floors | 1 |
Public transit access | OC Transpo Rideau, STO |
Freiman Mall (French: Mall Freiman) is an enclosed shopping arcade between Rideau and George Streets in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, east of Sussex Drive and west of William Street. The adjacent Hudson's Bay department store abuts the Freiman Mall on both its north and south sides, and can be accessed from the Freiman Mall interior in downtown Ottawa.
History
[edit]The current location of the Freiman Mall was once a public street called Mosgrove Street, located immediately to the east of the Freimans department store which was adjacent to the ByWard Market and the former Metropolitan department store. The street was later renamed Freiman Street after the department store and its founder, Archibald Jacob Freiman. The Freimans department store was acquired by the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) in 1972 and rebranded as an outlet of the company's (then) "The Bay" chain.[1][2]
In conjunction with the development of the Rideau Centre across the street, the City of Ottawa agreed in 1981 to close Freiman Street and to lease the land to the HBC for a term of 99 years in exchange for the construction of an enclosed, public pedestrian passageway connecting Rideau Street to George Street and the ByWard Market, to be open 24 hours per day. Under the terms of the lease, HBC was entitled to install three kiosks related to its store within the new Freiman Mall. The company and the city would share operating and security costs, with the city's share based on the proportion of public (non-retail) floor area and the amount of time the mall would be open past the store's operating hours.[1]
The Freiman Mall was officially opened by Ottawa mayor Marion Dewar on May 12, 1983, at which time a commemorative plaque was unveiled within the mall honouring A. J. Freiman and his family.[3][4]
In order to reduce the city's share of the operating and security costs, the lease was amended in 1992 to allow HBC to encroach into the Freiman Mall with its merchandise displays, as long as a minimum 6.1-metre (20 ft)-wide public passageway was maintained. So as to reduce security costs, the lease amendment also allowed the company to close the Freiman Mall during a portion of the night.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Planning and Environment Committee (2 December 2004). "Report Ref N°: ACS2004-CCS-PEC-0014". City of Ottawa. Archived from the original on 9 March 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
- ^ "Our History". Hudson's Bay Company. Archived from the original on 28 May 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
- ^ "You are invited to the Official Opening of the Freiman Mall". Ottawa Citizen. 7 May 1983.
- ^ Middleton, Janice (30 December 1986). "Much-honored businessman, Lawrence Freiman, dies". Ottawa Citizen.