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Edmonton

Edmontonians disappointed at loss of Army & Navy store

Edmontonians are disappointed at the loss of Army & Navy, the iconic discount department store on Whyte Avenue.

Discount department store a pillar that established retail district on Whyte Avenue

A view of a storefront from outside, on the sidewalk. The windows are boarded up with plywood.
Army & Navy has announced its five Western Canada locations would be closing permanently, including the longtime Whyte Avenue fixture. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

When residents of Old Strathcona walked by the boarded-up windows of the Army & Navy store on Whyte Avenue in recent weeks, many believed it would be a temporary closure.

Like many retail businesses, the chain store that dubbed itself"Canada's Original Discount Department Store" and was most popularly known for its shoe sales had shuttered its doors in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

But on Saturday the family-owned company announced it was closing all its five stores in Western Canada due to the pandemic's economic impact.

Many Edmontonians took to Twitter to share their disappointment at the loss of the fixture in south-central Edmonton

"Army & Navy won't be reopening after over 100 years in business. Whyte [Avenue]won't be the same," tweeted Scott Rowland.

"That's awful," wrote another Twitter user, Brent Jans. "I shopped there all the time, it was my go to for inexpensive housewares."

Matt Aquiletti has lived in the area for a decade. He hadbeen going to the store ever since he first moved there as a student at the University of Alberta.

"I was a poor student. I would go there to buy clothing, supplies and a lot of things," Aquilettisaid. "They were cheap, they were unapologetically cheap."

A historical photo in sepia tones showing people lined up on the sidewalk to enter the Army & Navy department store.
Army & Navy celebrates its grand re-opening after a renovation in 1968. The signage has not changed since. (Army & Navy)

The store was an especially great resource to him at the time but he never stopped going.

"Now I own a condo in the area and I still went there, once every week or once every two weeks, to look around and buy household supplies and such," he said.

Aquiletti noticed the boarded-up windows a couple weeks into the pandemic during his regular commute to the Tim Hortons on Whyte Avenue.

"I assumed it was protection, that they were looking to prevent smashed windows and stuff."

But on Saturday he was disappointed to learn that the store would never open its doors again.

"I was blown away, that 'oh my God, I can't believe that they are gone.' I thought they were going to pull through," he said.

'Saddened by the news'

The Vancouver-based company was 101 years old but the store building on Whyte Avenue hasbeen there since the 1950s. Priorto that, Edmontonhad anArmy &Navy storein the city's downtownthat wasbuilt in 1928.

Cherie Klassen, executive director of the Old Strathcona Business Association, said the store was one of three pillars of the community, alongside Prudham's and United Cycle, that established the retail business district in the area.

"We are definitely saddened by the news," Klassen said. "I mean, Army &Navy has been one of the three pillars of retail that started in our community decades ago and so that means we know that it was a tough decision, likely, for them.

"This is a loss for us."

Klassen said the pandemic has had an impact on many small businesses in the area.

"They have all had to either really adjust their business model and adapt. Many have had to make tough decisions of temporarily or permanently closing," she said.

Itis important to keep supporting local businesses, she said.

Although there are no plans for the space, Aquiletti hopes the building does not get demolished. He said he is afraid it would change into something that's "bland and generic and the street would lose a little bit of its character."

"So I hope they keep the sign or some vestige of what that building used to be."