Toronto – Wandering through the latest store of Simmons a day before opening on Thursday, Bernard Lablank had a calm confidence despite the busyness around it.
Almost every inch cross of the flagship store in Yorkdel Mall in Toronto, the employee location goods, vacuum carpets and dress were screaming to embellish and steam the last of the effigies.
It seems that the monthly works fulfilled the vastness that they were preparing for everyone: Simmons’ entered the respected Toronto market.
That feat has been a long time. La Maison Simmons is 185 years old, but has made such a systematic expansion outside his home province of Quebec that it counts only 17 stores so far. While it wanted to head for Toronto for a long time, it somehow shut down in a nearby missisaga before making its way in Ontario’s heart on Thursday on the outskirts of Halifax, Vancouver and even the city.
CEO of Simmons, LWC, looks at the entry of both the “new chapters” for the company and gives evidence that “the slow and stable race wins.”
“Finally, we have the owner who does not think in the quarters. We think in generations,” he said about the Simmons family.
He founded a business as a dry goods retailer in Quebec City in 1840 and charted his development at a department store, beloved by Canadian fashionists.
Leblanc is the first non-family member to have a top job of company and hence is a lot of ride on Toronto expansion.
The retailer will spend a combined $ 75 million at the Yorkdel Store and another to follow in the Eaton Center in this decline. Leblancing him hopes that he will increase the company’s annual sales by 15 percent.
In some cases, their milestone is coming at a right time. The last eight months saw an increase in consumer support for Canadian goods between Simmons’ biggest contestant-355-year-old department store Hudson’s Gulf and Tariff War. The Simmons House brand, including twenty, economous, contemporary and le 31, make 70 percent of its stores on average.
While Labbank is thrilled to see patriotism affecting customers, he is not re -rewriting his opponent, which filed for conservation of creditor under the weight of increasing debt in March.
“I am saddened by the fact that such a historic Canadian icon has left the market,” he said about Hudson’s Gulf. “As a retailer, we like to do a very fierce and dynamic retail industry, so getting out of someone is always a slight shock for the industry.”
It was also a reminder to Simmons that the company has to re -establish itself because “history and heritage success is not guaranteed,” he said.
Simmons have not publicly emerged as bidder for any Gulf Pattas or intellectual property.
Nor is it “aggressively chased specific brands that we did not have due to exit from various people in the industry,” Lablink said.
“We scout the market globally for the new upcoming brands and discover the brands that people probably don’t know,” he said. “It is more focused, not so much to be opportunistic, to take something that someone left behind.”
But this is something that someone left behind, which helped his company’s Toronto ambitions to make reality.
Simmons were only able to visit Yorkdale and Eaton Centers as the US Department Store Nordstrom decorated from Canada in 2023, saying that it was very difficult to earn a profit in the market.
Nordstrom, held at some top shopping sites in Toronto, introduced large -scale properties, which has long been watching the Simmons.
“We were in discussion with Yorkdale for some time,” Lablanc said. “We were trying to see here many years ago what we could potentially do together.”
In 118,000 sq ft, the new, two -storey Yorkdel will be the largest place in the Ontario portfolio of Simmons. Many shopkeepers from the same brand have come to expect other markets – Herschels, JW Anderson and Lacoste.
This place is a huge, geometric roof wall called “Ciel” from French artist Nelio that makes the store feel a fresh, airy. A “Walk of Frame” made of 40 out of 24 artists brings another reason to many nooks of the store.
Leblanc is suppressing the goods and the store will continue to return to the vibe customers and teach its company valuable lessons, using it as it continues for future development conspiracy.
He nominated both Toronto and Vancouver as markets that may be able to support even more Simmons stores, but now he said that he is focusing on “taking all this in the structure”.
“I am really excited about making these two shops successful, starting with Yorkdale,” he said. “And then we will see where things take us.”
This report of Canadian Press was first published on August 14, 2025.
Tara Deschamps, Canadian Press