Saskatoon·Photos

Saskatoon's Midtown Plaza ushers in major renovations as new second-floor food court opens

"I can't believe this used to be Sears." Those were the first words Mayor Charlie Clark said to reporters at the grand opening of the new food court at the Midtown Plaza on Thursday.

Midtown Common is part of $80M investment into the downtown mall

Part of the new look at the Midtown Common. (Matt Garand/CBC News)

Mayor Charlie Clark's first response to the new food court at Midtown Plaza was disbelief.  

"I can't believe this used to be Sears," he told reporters on Thursday.

The food court, called the "Midtown Common," is located in what used to be the second floor of the Sears store.

The new location introduces more natural light into the space. (Matt Garand/CBC News)
Instead of a ribbon-cutting, officials did a "first bite" ceremony. (Matt Garand/CBC News)

It's taken just over a year and a half for the food court to shift to its new upstairs location as the old court is gutted to create space for a new Mountain Equipment Co-Op to open up in April 2020.

The new food court is located on the second floor of Midtown Plaza. (Matt Garand/CBC News)

Unlike the old main floor location, the new food court includes a lot of light from windows, lounge-like seating, and a fireplace. It also includes new food spots like Pi Co, Mia Pasta, KFC, Bourbon St. Grill and TCBY.

Eleven restaurants from the old location have moved up to the second floor.

The renovation got an enthusiastic review from local MLA and cabinet minister Don Morgan, who recalled the mall's origins in 1968 when there was no food court.

The new version, he said, has a "cosmopolitan flavour."

Bourbon St. Grill is one of the new food spots at the food court. (Matt Garand/CBC News)

It's also got a healthy dose of investment. The owners are planning to put a total of $80 million into mall renovations.

When asked if online retailers are taking a bite out of mall traffic these days, Clark said the new food court is a sign that there is still economic opportunity in Saskatoon.

"This is one of the only malls across the country where they're making this level of reinvestment right now ... this is what they need to do to be competitive," he said.

The main floor and basement of the old Sears store are still closed off to the public.

The mall's ownership group, led by Toronto-based KingSett Capital, has said the main floor will be subdivided into at least a dozen spaces but has not yet announced what retailers will be there.

Part of the new look at the Midtown Common. (Matt Garand/CBC News)