Vancouver’s next major luxury retail moment has officially arrived.
Oakridge Park has unveiled a first look at its highly anticipated retail lineup—and it’s shaping up to be one of the most ambitious shopping destinations in North America.
Blending fashion, food, wellness, art, entertainment, and public space into one massive cultural hub, the reimagined development promises far more than a traditional mall experience. Think elevated architecture, sprawling rooftop parks, luxury residences, world-class dining, and a curated mix of global fashion heavyweights and beloved local brands—all in the heart of Vancouver.
Among the incoming names are luxury icons, coveted contemporary labels, and first-to-market concepts set to transform the city’s retail landscape. The vision? A walkable “city within a city” where shopping feels experiential, social, and deeply integrated into daily life.
And honestly, the scale is staggering.
Once complete, Oakridge Park will feature more than nine acres of public park space, pedestrian pathways, cultural programming, premium office space, residences, and an enormous retail footprint designed to rival major global shopping destinations.
For Vancouver, it marks a major shift—not just in retail, but in how the city imagines urban living, luxury, and community gathering spaces moving forward.
In other words: your future weekend plans may already be decided. —Noa Nichol

May 20th, 2026 at 10:21 am
So ready for the May 28 reveal! The combination of luxury retail, rooftop parks, and curated local brands sounds like exactly what Vancouver has been missing. Fingers crossed the execution lives up to the vision — this could genuinely reshape how we think about shopping and public space in the city.
May 20th, 2026 at 10:24 am
May 28 is officially circled on my calendar. The blend of luxury fashion, rooftop parks, and curated dining sounds like exactly the kind of destination Vancouver has been waiting for. Hoping the execution matches the ambition — this could genuinely redefine what a modern urban hub looks like in Canada.