Three New Tenants Coming To Moncton’s Granite Centre
The new businesses taking up residence in the development are part of an ongoing trend at the “Dartmouth Crossing of New Brunswick.”
The new businesses taking up residence in the development are part of an ongoing trend at the “Dartmouth Crossing of New Brunswick.”
U-Haul is seeking permission from the City of Moncton to take up the space formerly occupied by Costco on Trinity Drive.
Abdulsalam Mohammad has owned Mid-East Food Centre & Café since 2008. But now the store may close for good because Mohammad is facing a rent increase of $1,000-$2,000 per month.
With a slew of businesses signing leases and construction chugging along, the Granite Centre is expected to hit capacity by the end of 2024.
Paul Arsenault, the general contractor and developer behind Mountainway Estates, says demand is so hot for new housing that he expects to complete the development in around half the time he originally predicted.
The city formed a task force in early March to try and get to the bottom of the odour which some have described as smelling like a manure pile.
Just three years after founding The Loot, Anna Campbell has moved her business into a spacious property on historic Barrington Street. The space is twice as large as her old location.
Photographer Chris Donovan’s photo book, Stay Solid or Go West, captures the unique Maritime dichotomy of working and living out west when home is in the east.
Among the confections are exotic Kit Kat flavours (key lime pie, anyone?), four types of Mountain Dew, pickle-flavoured cotton candy, some A&W dessert topper, and even hunks of chocolate made to look like marijuana.
The towers near the intersection of Robie Street and Almon Street will each hold a mix of commercial and residential space. Together, they will contain 620 residential units and have more than 50,000 square feet reserved for retail.