TimeVallée to open in Montreal first store in Canada – CPP-LUXURY


TimeVallée, the Richemont-owned luxury watch and jewellery multi-brand retail concept, will open its first flagship store in Canada in partnership with Canadian jewellery retailer Maison Birks in September.

The 2,800-square-foot store will be located in the highly anticipated Royalmount development in midtown Montreal. It will offer a curated selection of watches from Baume & Mercier, Cartier, Chopard, Grand Seiko, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Panerai and Piaget.

Set to open on September 5, the flagship will mark TimeVallée’s 50th boutique worldwide, adding to its locations in China, Korea, Japan, the Middle East, India and Europe operated by strategic partners.

Jean-Christophe Bédos, president and chief executive of Birks Group Inc., said in a statement: “We are proud and thrilled to partner with TimeVallée to bring our knowledge of the Canadian luxury landscape to this innovative luxury watches retail concept.

Royalmount is being spearheaded by Quebec-based real estate development and management company Carbonleo will be home to more than 170 stores and 60 restaurants, with 50 percent of the brands and retail concepts set to be completely new to the Quebec market.

Other luxury brands signed up for the shopping development include Saint Laurent, Versace, Jimmy Choo, Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Tiffany, David Yurman, Tag Heuer, Michael Kors, Moncler, Longchamp and Canada Goose. They will join retailers including Zara, Nike, Anine Bing, Mango, H&M, Alo Yoga, Veronica Beard, and Sephora.

TimeVallée Royalmount (Montreal)


More from NEWS


Pandora reports 15 percent growth in fiscal Q2

Trumpeting higher store traffic, Pandora reported organic revenues gained 15 percent in its fiscal second quarter to 6.77 billion Danish …



Frasers Group increases its stake in Hugo Boss AG

British retail group Frasers Group Plc has once again increased its stake in the German fashion retailer Hugo Boss AG.

The …



Luxury brands increase prices in Japan

Some luxury brands are pushing through price increases in Japan, as tourists snapping up high-end goods turn the country into …



Source link