St. Vital Centre
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St. Vital Centre | |
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| Location | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 49°49′43″N 97°06′36″W / 49.8286°N 97.1101°W |
| Address | 1225 St. Mary's Road |
| Opening date | October 17, 1979 |
| Developer | Trizec |
| Management | BentallGreenOak (Canada) LP |
| Owner | Leyad [1] |
| Stores and services | 170 |
| Anchor tenants | 10 |
| Floor area | 68 acres (28 ha) |
| Floors | 2 |
| Public transit | |
| Website | www |
St. Vital Centre is a retail shopping mall located at 1225 St. Mary's Road, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
The 631,000 sq ft (58,600 m2), built on 40 acres (160,000 m2),[2] opened 17 October 1979 and is located by the intersection of St. Mary's Road and Abinojii Mikanah.[3] It opened with Eaton's, The Bay, and Woolco as anchor tenants.[4] The mall was renovated in 1986, 1998, and 2013.[3]
The building has six anchor tenants and 160 smaller stores, and has a gross leasable area of 926,310 sq ft (86,057 m2) including the freestanding Co-op grocery store, Montana's Cookhouse, Old Navy, CIBC, McDonald’s, and Earls.[5] St. Vital Centre is owned by the Ontario Pension Board and was previously managed by 20 VIC Management Inc. to 2017 and Cushman & Wakefield Asset Services ULC to December 2020. Management of St. Vital Centre is now done by BentallGreenOak (Canada) LP.
The mall has 4,661 parking spaces, as well as a city transit bus depot positioned close to an entrance.[3][6] As of 2001, the mall serves approximately 53,825 households within a 5 kilometre radius, with an average household income of $56,925.[4] The location sees approximately 178,000 pedestrians per week.[3]
The mall recycles plastics and aluminum in their food court, and paper in their offices, and recycles 4,315 metric tons (4,247 long tons; 4,756 short tons) of cardboard every year.[7]
In 2012, the mall underwent a $10 million renovation, which was completed in November 2012. The renovation included new flooring, ceilings, wall coverings and energy efficient lighting.[8]
In 2026 St. Vital Centre was sold to Leyad for 160.5 Million dollars from the Ontario Pension board.[9]
