Toronto Star

Thousands line up for grand opening of Halifax’s Ikea

First of 12 new stores across Canada welcomes crowd with clowns and political speeches

- MICHAEL TUTTON THE CANADIAN PRESS

HALIFAX— Several thousand people lined up early Wednesday to enter Ikea Halifax as the firm launched the first of 12 new stores across Canada amid circus performers, political speeches and a Swedish flag raising.

Hundreds had secured places at the front of a line that wound around the store in the Dartmouth Crossing retail district, while the shop’s 1,100-car parking lot was nearly full as people stood wrapped in blankets in a cool Nova Scotia mist.

Some of the shoppers were there for gift certificat­es, others for opening sales, while some were just there to take it all in.

Jocelyn Adams said she and a friend had been in line since about 3:30 a.m.

“We’re looking for bedding and side tables,” she said.

“It’s going to be fun exploring and checking things off our list . . . We hear there’s a shelving unit on sale.”

Ikea’s return to the region had the city abuzz — the opening dominated social media and other conversa- tions, including one Twitter user who joked so many people lined up “because not a lot happens in Halifax.”

Liane Clouthier, a Dalhousie University student from Kitchener, Ont., joined her friend Amy Sutherland for more than 16 hours in line to witness the ribbon-cutting, yet she was uncertain she’d actually purchase anything.

“It was spontaneou­s,” she said of her decision to wait in line.

“We were driving by and we said, ‘We might as well stop and join them.’ I’m actually going to class soon, so I’m not even going inside.”

Ramesh Venkat, an associate business professor at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax, said the chain is benefiting from months of media hype leading up to the event.

“It’s really unusual. I can’t recall a situation like this where a retailer opens to such a large number of people,” he said.

Smith said that during her travels with a curling team, she has frequently stopped into the Montreal Ikea.

She is the kind of shopper the firm’s research suggested would make Ikea’s return to the city viable, after it closed a smaller shop three decades ago.

“We know people in the area already shop online and some even travel to Montreal. We’re super happy we can bring Ikea a little closer to them now,” said Marsha Smith, the president of the multinatio­nal’s Canadian division.

Smith said she couldn’t provide an exact estimate on the number of people who visited the store on opening day, but said there were more than 2,000 there by 9:30 a.m.

After Halifax Mayor Michael Savage cut the ribbon, people rushed inside. As in a similarly hyped opening in Winnipeg five years ago, several hundred staff emerged to clap noisemaker­s with the Ikea logo on them.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People camped out overnight at the new Ikea store in Halifax, N.S. Some didn’t even have the intention to shop, but just wanted to join in.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS People camped out overnight at the new Ikea store in Halifax, N.S. Some didn’t even have the intention to shop, but just wanted to join in.

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