Sign of the times: The Bay's illuminated name goes dark, comes down from Portage Avenue landmark - Action News
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Manitoba

Sign of the times: The Bay's illuminated name goes dark, comes down from Portage Avenue landmark

Friday marked the end of an era in downtown Winnipeg as the Hudson's Bay Company sign was removed from the top of the six-storey building the corner of Portage Avenue and Memorial Boulevard.

Hudson's Bay Company closed its downtown Winnipeg store at end of November

Workers removed the Bay sign from the downtown Winnipeg store on Friday. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Friday marked the end of an era in downtown Winnipeg as the Hudson's Bay Company sign was removed from the top of the retailer's six-storey building at the corner of Portage Avenue and Memorial Boulevard.

The yellow beacon, which could be seen through even the foggiest and snowiest days, has now met the same fate of the store ittrumpeted.

"The sign is a piece of tangible history," Heritage Winnipegexecutive directorCindy Tugwellsaid in an email.

Its removal is"a defining moment as it truly marks the end of an era for this purpose-built landmark downtown retail store."

The HBC, which is woven into the histories of the city and province,announced in Octoberit would close the675,000-square-foot building in February 2021 due to "shifting consumer behaviour" that saw crowds drastically shrink over the past decades, as they shifted to suburban and big box malls.

The doors were locked forever much sooner, at the end of November. The company cited provincial COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, which currently prevent the sale ofnon-essential goods in store, as a reason for hastening the closure.

WATCH | Crews remove the sign from the Bay's landmark downtown Winnipeg building:

Bay sign comes down from Winnipeg's landmark

4 years ago
Duration 0:56
Friday marked the end of an era in downtown Winnipeg as the Hudson's Bay Company sign was removed from the top of the six-storey building.

"I am sad to see a visible reminder of the proud heritage of that building removed, but I remain hopeful it [the building] can go on to serve the community in another capacity for many more years," said Gordon Goldsborough, president and head researcher at the Manitoba Historical Society.

The building, which opened on Nov. 18, 1926, once had 2,000 staff members. On opening day, they welcomed 50,000customers.

The store also boasted a multitude of departments stretched throughout its six floors including a restaurant, the largest fur-storage vault in Western Canada, a beauty parlour, public telephones, a post office, a library andan auditorium with its own orchestra.

The Bay sign shines through a snowy night on Portage Avenue. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

In more recent years, the Bay's complexion changedas it struggled.

In 2010,the building'sbasement was converted into a Zellersstore, but that closed only three years later.

In 2013, the Bay shuttered the Paddlewheel Restauranton the sixth floor, andin 2016, HBCconsolidated the retail space to justthe first two floors.

The questionnow is what to do with all that space.

Last November, when HBC appraised all of its 89 properties, the Portage Avenue building wasgiven a market value of $0by real estate evaluator Cushman & Wakefield because the costs involved inredevelopment would essentially eraseits worth in a sale.

At that point, the building was technicallyworth even less than that, because of a tax liability of $302,298.

The second floor of the Bay, a few weeks before the store was closed forever. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

"Many informal proposals for the building have been mentioned, and I think there is great potential here so long as we are open tocreative, new uses," Goldsborough said.

"One possible use that I am advocating is as a home for archives that I am calling the Manitoba Memory Centre. I think the building would be an excellent home for the City of Winnipeg Archives, additional storage space for the Archives of Manitoba next door, as well as retail space on the street level and office spaceelsewhere.

"In other words, it is a multi-faceted reuse plan that embraces the building's important connection to the history of Manitoba will provide, in my view, the best possible future for the former HBC store."

Tugwell said Heritage Winnipeg is looking forward to making sure the building is repurposedas a community hub for the downtown area for generations to come.

City's long ties to HBC

Winnipeg has a long connection with the company, whose first retail department store opened in the city in 1881 at the corner of Main Street and York Avenue.

In 1970, on the 300th birthday of the company which shortened its named from the Hudson's Bay Company to the Bay in 1964 head office functions were transferred from London, England, to Winnipeg.

The Bay in downtown Winnipeg has stood at the corner of Portage and Memorial for 94 years. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

As the company expanded into the east, head office functions were later moved to Toronto.

The Hudson's Bay Company Archives are located in the Manitoba Archives building on Vaughan Street, across from the Bay's parkade.

The records cover HBC history from the founding of the company in 1670, including business transactions, medical records, personal journals of officials, inventoriesand company reports.