List of shopping centres in Greater Longueuil

The major tenants are IKEA, Costco, Rona le Rénovateur, Super C, Winners, Homesense, Marshalls, Bureau en Gros, Deco Decouverte, and Linen Chest.

Many of the tenants are small business, but the mall also has a number of retailing chains such as Dollarama, La Source, Greiche & Scaff, Ardène, Le Naturiste and Panda.

A nearby Réno-Dépot hardware store is a tenant of Place Portobello, despite not sharing any indoor or outdoor boundary with the rest of the mall.

[10] Following the acquisition of the eight Quebec Beaver Lumber locations by Groupe Val Royal Ltd, the Portobello store closed on December 24, 1987, was given a facelift and reopened in early February 1988 as a Brico Centre outlet.

[18][19] Tenants that once made business at Mail Carnaval include a Famous Players movie theatre, the National Bank of Canada and a Zellers department store.

Shortly after Zellers closed in May 2010, the name of the mall was changed from Mail Carnaval to 5000 Taschereau Boulevard; it has since been rechristened to Complexe 5mille.

[26] In February 2020, Village des Valeurs left its location at Galeries Tachereau it had occupied since 1991, to relocate to other side the street on Auguste Avenue.

[29] Opened as an indoor mall in 1965, Place Greenfield was the first enclosed shopping centre in the South Shore of Montreal[29] but was converted to the strip format in 2001.

[33] Its space was later occupied by a Club Biz office supply store from October 29, 1992, until that chain filed for bankruptcy protection and closed in early 1996.

[34][35] Like the rest of Club Biz locations, the lease was acquired by Bureau en Gros which inaugurated its store on June 1, 1996, a few days after opening its door to the public.

[39] In October 2007, Leon's left its location in the mall and moved to the intersection of Chambly Road and Autoroute 30 in the St-Hubert borough of Longueuil.

After being for much of the 2010s either a Ha Bay furniture store or a Le Grand Marché Rive-Sud flea market, the space was subdivided in 2017 by Jysk, Univers Kids Dépôt and a portion of Giant Tiger.

[42] Along with the stores at Place Versailles and Quebec City, it was one of the three final Pascal's locations to close which concluded the history of the 87-year-old hardware chain.

[42] Goineau-Bousquet, a hardware retailer from Laval announced in late 1991 that it would set up a 100,000 square foot store in the former Pascal's site in Greenfield Park.

[43] Goineau-Bousquet filed for bankruptcy protection on June 3, 1996, and, in the process, announced the closing of its Greenfield Park location, effective for the end of July.

[44] On October 22, 1998, Cinémas Guzzo opened biggest movie theater in the country combined with a recreational mix of arcade games, bumper cars and a carousel.

Wise had been with Place Greenfield Park since the shopping centre's debut in 1965, originating as a small tenant in the mall,[29] and later relocating as an anchor store at 391 Taschereau[a] since at least the year 1990.

[40] In early August 1980, Calgary-based Mark's Work Wearhouse entered the Montreal market under the name La Ouerasse with the opening of four stores including one at Place Greenfield Park near the corner of Gladstone Avenue.

[52] L'Équipeur expanded in September 1996 as a store of 15,000 square feet of floor space in the same shopping centre, becoming the chain's largest location in Quebec.

The mall was at its peak in the 1980s, with a total of 75 stores including anchors Rona, Greenberg, Sports Experts, Croteau, Jean Coutu and Metro.

By the mid-2000s, it had all but been turned into a dead mall, with retailing chains such as La Source, Société des alcools du Québec and Petland having closed in addition to the many small businesses.

To add to the injury, a fire in 2007 destroyed La Crémière, a fast food and ice cream store, and the Jean-Coutu pharmacy, causing the permanent closure of the former and relocation of the latter.

It is located at the intersection of Chambly Road and Ste-Foy Boulevard Its original anchors in 1957 were Steinberg's, Wise, Woolworth's and United Stores.

[56][57] These companies are gone today but their anchor spaces have remained more or less the same and are currently occupied respectively by IGA, Rossy, Dollarama and Village des Valeurs.

[66] Tenants in the 1970s included Steinberg's, the Bank of Montreal, Banque Canadienne Nationale, Reitmans, J B Lefebvre and Laura Secord Chocolates.

[68] This increased Place Desormeaux's number of tenants to 70 but the total area size of the shopping mall remained unchanged because the expansion was strictly limited indoor within the Bonimart space.

Its closing greatly decreased consumer traffic in the part of the mall it was located to the point that by the mid-1990s there was not a single store left around where used to be Bonimart.

[76] Unlike the shops, Steinberg's and Miracle Mart were spared due to the presence of fire sprinkler systems in their stores.

[83] Carré Saint-Lambert[84] is a small strip mall located on Sir Wilfrid Laurier Boulevard near Victoria Avenue in St. Lambert, Quebec, Canada.

Its major tenants include IGA, Familiprix, Le SuperClub Vidéotron, Société des alcools du Québec.

Former Zellers at Place Portobello, one of the largest stores in the province for this retailer