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POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity, Ryerson University, Toronto Canada.

POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

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POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity, Ryerson University, Toronto Canada. Outline: Three Stages of Commercial Structure A Focus on Power Retail Power Retail in Context Power Nodes The Implications and Future of Power Nodes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

POWER NODES:

DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY

Jim Simmons,Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

Ryerson University, Toronto Canada.

Page 2: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

OUTLINE:

1.Three Stages of Commercial Structure

2.A Focus on Power Retail

3.Power Retail in Context

4.Power Nodes

5.The Implications and Future of Power Nodes

Page 3: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

THREE STAGES OF COMMERCIAL STRUCTURE

a) Traditional Retail

Small family-owned shops

Transit-oriented

Highly competitive, but inefficient

Page 4: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

Traditional Retail Photo

TRADITIONAL RETAIL STREET

Page 5: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

b) Shopping Centres

Large shops, retail chains

Single ownership, anchor store

Based on spatial and sectoral monopolies

Page 6: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

MAP OF SHOPPING CENTRE

Department Store Anchor

Page 7: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

c) Power Retail

Huge stores, big box chains

Automobile access

Compete using price, selection and

brand marketing

Page 8: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

 

POWER RETAIL: DEFINITIONS Big Box Store: Retail outlets that are typically at least three of more times larger than other stores in the same retail sector, as measured by floor area. Power Centre: A cluster of three or more big box retailers with a shared parking lot, and perhaps ancillary commercial services such as coffee shops. Power Node: One power centre with additional big box stores and other power centres and malls within one kilometre radius, typically centred on a major intersection.

Page 9: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

Power Centre Photo

POWER NODE PHOTO

Page 10: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

HighwayInterchange

Home Depot

Supermarket

RioCan BurlOakPower Centre

Parking Lot

Page 11: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,
Page 12: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

THE GREATER TORONTO AREA

Population, 2001 5,297,000

Population, 2009 6,114,000

Population Change 817,000

Growth Rate 15.4 per cent (2001-2009)

Income per capita $31,000 (2006)

Market Income $172.5 billion (2006)

Population bornoutside Canada 45.7 per cent (2006)

Page 13: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,
Page 14: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

HOW BIG ARE THE POWER NODES? The Biggest Nodes in the Greater Toronto Area 

Floor Stores Big Power Shopping Growth Rate,Area* Boxes Centres Centres 2001-2010

 1. 3,450,000 250 74 5 3 45.3% 2. 2,837,000 506 49 4 7 56.1 3. 2,112,000 296 40 3 4 56.4

* Floor Area in Square Feet

Page 15: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

Type of Facility

Number Floor Area (1000s)

Share of Floor Area

Floor Area/ Store

Floor Area/ Node

Traditional Retail Strips

224 38,090 23.2% 1,586 170,000

Shopping Centres

581 88,132 53.7 4,015 151,600

Power Retail 95 30,592 18.6 12,752 322,000

TOTAL 900 164,284 100.0 3,392 174,200

Power Nodes 33 35,480 21.6 8,767 1,075,200

COMMERCIAL FACILITIES: GTA, 2010

Source: CSCA fieldwork

Page 16: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,
Page 17: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,
Page 18: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

WHO SHOPS WHERE?(Above Average Proportions)

 Traditional Retail Apartment Dwellers

Small FamiliesSeniors/ RetireesTransit Users

Shopping Centres WomenYoung PeoplePeople not WorkingCustomers who Travel from Home

as Passengers

Page 19: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

Power Retail Home OwnersMulti-Car HouseholdsMen, Middle-agedBlue Collar OccupationsCustomers who Travel from

other Retail, as Drivers

 Source: Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,using the Transportation for Tomorrow data.

Page 20: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,
Page 21: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

THE FUTURE OF POWER NODES

The Good:Efficient (Inexpensive)Popular with young familiesAttracts retail investment

The Bad:Low DensityAutomobile-orientedWeakens existing town centresUnattractive to seniors, transit usersWeak Internal structure Poor links with community

Page 22: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,

Vulnerable?Environmental policiesHigher energy costsLand use restrictionsHigher land costsDemographic changes (aging, immigration)On-line Competition

Page 23: POWER NODES: DOWNTOWNS IN THE PERIPHERY Jim Simmons, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity,