Mid-Century Modern Furniture Brand Mim Concept Opens Queen Street West Flagship

Vietnamese-Canadian founder Anh Ly brings her direct-to-consumer furniture model to the heart of Toronto's design district, fulfilling a decade-old dream

Mim Concept has opened its first downtown Toronto showroom at 493 Queen Street West, marking a significant milestone for the six-year-old furniture brand that specializes in minimalist, mid-century modern designs tailored specifically for Toronto’s condo market.

For founder Anh Ly, the location represents a full-circle moment. Queen West was the first neighborhood she visited after immigrating to Canada a decade ago. “In my head I was like, one day maybe I have a store here,” Ly said. “And actually I made it happen.”

Finding the Perfect Space

Anh Ly

Ly had been searching for a Queen Street West location since last year but couldn’t find anything suitable. When she finally found 493 Queen Street West, she moved quickly—securing the unit before it officially hit the market after initially inquiring about a neighboring property.

Unlike traditional furniture showrooms that prioritize square footage, Ly deliberately sought something smaller with a boutique feel. “We try to stay away from a traditional furniture showroom, very big and very diluted,” she explained. “I want something small and have a boutique feel.”

The showroom sits just steps from the Queen and Spadina intersection. Inside, the layout is conversational and open—customers can see everything from the entrance, then settle into a lounge area for coffee while browsing. “I wanted it to be really open space and conversational,” Ly said. “You start a story and you can see everything and then you have a lounge area, have a coffee together.”

From Thesis to Business Model

Mim Concept Queen West (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

Ly’s journey to furniture entrepreneurship is rooted in her architectural training. She earned her Master of Architecture from Curtin University in Australia, then worked as a graduate architect in Ho Chi Minh City from 2014 to 2016 before moving to Ontario for interior design roles.

Her 2020 thesis criticized how “the current architectural environment appears to lack any real focus on the development of homes” and instead favored “the object and its cosmetic experience.” Six years into running Mim Concept, she’s found that furniture shapes how people live just as much as architecture does.

“If you have a lift-up coffee table, you can work there, you can play games, you have dinner there—it’s actually changed our way of living,” Ly said. “That’s why when I designed the Joey bed, the first piece I ever designed, and moving along, I find myself curating to younger people with smaller living spaces like condos in Toronto.”

The frustration that sparked Mim Concept came from personal experience. When furnishing her own downtown condo, Ly struggled to find quality modern furniture that fit Toronto’s spatial constraints. “I find that most furniture is very bulky. It’s really hard to get into a standard door frame or a standard elevator, and especially a bedroom—they’re cut smaller and smaller now.”

Her solution: design furniture specifically for Toronto’s condo market, with pieces compact enough to fit standard elevators and door frames without requiring freight elevator bookings.

Cutting Out the Middlemen

Rendering: MIM Concept

After working for a furniture company in Vaughan to learn industry operations, Ly realized that “manufacturing furniture in Toronto is not cost effective. You had to sacrifice—you cannot get quality furniture with a price that’s suitable for most young adults.”

She spent six months in Vietnam establishing direct relationships with small factories. “I’m the designer and I’m also the one who sources the suppliers and I’m dealing directly with factories and bringing the furniture directly from factory to consumers,” Ly explained. “So we’re able to cut down quite a bit of the cost.”

The company maintains low overhead with one warehouse location in Mississauga and now the compact Queen Street showroom. Ly has also made deliberate choices about marketing spend—declining numerous requests from influencers for free furniture. “I know there are a lot of influencers who reach out to us and ask for free furniture. We just cannot give it up because it will add cost to our consumers, our customers. And I don’t want that.”

Instead, she focuses on customer education, teaching buyers why mixing solid wood with engineered wood produces more durable furniture for Canadian climates than solid wood alone. “In order for solid wood to work in Canada, we have to dry it down really, really low to a certain percentage of moisture. And that process may be more expensive and it’s easy to split—the Canadian climate is very cold and dry. Meanwhile Vietnam is very humid and hot. So we have to treat the wood right. We have to choose which part we use solid wood and which part we use engineered wood.”

The Unconventional Launch Path

Mim Concept took an unusual route to market when it launched in January 2019. “Usually for furniture brands, they start with a showroom,” Ly said. “But I started with a website, one single website, and then a warehouse location. And then from there, I see where the trend is at, and people actually want to come by and see it. Not everybody wants to just buy online.”

The company now offers both in-person browsing and virtual viewing appointments—which Ly notes many customers prefer to navigating downtown traffic. About 30% of sales come from outside Toronto, with another 20% historically from the United States, though recent trade policy uncertainty has impacted cross-border business.

Ly credits her success partly to staff retention—most of her team has been with her for all six years. “When I introduce new part-time or new sales associates, I spend quite a bit of time with them to actually let them know what the brand is about,” she said. “Each piece, we don’t have any excuse. They actually have to learn each item—where it’s made, the composition, everything. And if they’re not passionate about it, they’re not the right candidate for the job.”

Looking West and Beyond

Mim Concept Queen West (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

With the Queen Street showroom now open, Ly’s expansion plans include Vancouver and eventually a cautious move into the U.S. market. “I’m not a really political person, but it actually affects my business,” she said of current trade conditions. “So I’m just going to wait it out. We’re still a very small company, so there’s definitely room to expand and take in investors when we’re ready to expand faster.”

She’s also planning a documentary film about the Vietnamese factory workers who manufacture Mim’s furniture. “They deserve to be seen,” Ly said. “We have a few photos of them back in the day, but now I want to actually make a video to introduce to Toronto people—this is how furniture is made.”

For now, Ly is focused on establishing the Queen Street flagship as what she calls a discovery destination in “the heart of what’s happening in Toronto.” The showroom is open Tuesday through Sunday, 11 AM to 8 PM at 493 Queen Street West.

Mim Concept Queen West (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

More from 6ix Retail

How AI Is Changing the Way Canadians Discover Where to Shop

One in four Canadians now use AI to make purchase decisions. Retail Rewired founder Chris Parsons explains what that means for operators who are not yet paying attention.

Mirvish Village Reveals Commercial Tenant Lineup as Summer 2026 Completion Nears

The former Honest Ed's site at Bloor and Bathurst will include a 19,000-square-foot food hall, restored heritage retail on Markham Street, and a Tokyo-inspired micro-retail alley

Juice Dudez Enters Toronto at The Well, Eyes Second GTA Location Before End of 2026

Seven years after opening in Westboro, Nasr Nasr is bringing his fresh juice and Belgian chocolate concept to Canada's biggest market, with a second GTA location already in the works.

Brewing at the Market: C’est What Opens Inside St. Lawrence Market

Thirty-eight years on Front Street, and now a corner of the lower level at St. Lawrence Market. George Milbrandt on the ten-year idea that finally became real.

Toronto Has 192 Acres of Waterfront Sitting Underused. Not for Much Longer.

The Board voted yes. The planning and consultation work is underway. And the operators who understand where this is heading will be better positioned than those who wait.

Toronto Tempo Performance Centre Coming to Exhibition Place in 2028

The Toronto Tempo and the City of Toronto are building a world-class training facility on an underused parking lot at Exhibition Place. The deal structure is something every Toronto operator, broker, and developer should be paying attention to.

Queen West’s Reinvention: New Brand, Night Economy, and the Ontario Line Opportunity 

The Queen Street West BIA has a new brand, two Ontario Line stations on the way, and a  world cup block party planned for July 2nd. Simon Wong on what the next chapter of one of Toronto's most iconic streets looks like. 

Meet the Two Canadians Who Turned a Crying Chicken Nugget Into a Retail Phenomenon

The untold story of Sad Nuggie, the Ontario-born brand that built a community of over a billion views before it ever opened a store — and what its CF Toronto Eaton Centre pop-up says about the future of Canadian retail.

Firehouse Subs Continues Growth in Toronto with Sixth Location

Firehouse Subs set to open sixth downtown Toronto location at ICE Condos, targeting 60-70 new Canadian restaurants in 2026

The Third Space Is the New Storefront

Gen Z is spending more, staying longer and coming back more often, but only in stores that give them a reason to be there.

Playa Bowls Chooses The Well for Its First Canadian Location

Eat Up Canada's George Heos on trust, timing, and what it really takes to bring an American brand to Canada the right way

LSD°R Opens Second Toronto Studio in Summerhill

The King West reformer Pilates brand brings its breathwork method to Midtown with a 3,000-square-foot space and new red light therapy offering

Orso Activewear Finds Its Permanent Home at the Distillery District

After two years of pop-ups, a container store, and a lesson learned at Union Station, the brand built from recycled fishing nets has finally found its home.

Matcha Haus Is Coming to First Canadian Place and the Financial District Is the Target

Founder Angela Yan mapped her customer, waited for the right space, and is bringing specialty matcha to the heart of Toronto's underground network.

From Corner Shop to Market: How Toronto’s Food Brands Are Building the New Retail Playbook

Toronto's most interesting food brands aren't just feeding the city. They're building retail empires, one hoodie, one collab, and one plush beaver at a time.

One Of A Kind Spring Market Is Back. Toronto Needs It More Than Ever.

The One Of A Kind Spring Market returns to Toronto's Enercare Centre April 9–12 with over 500 Canadian artisans, new sections, and an experience that reminds us what brings us together.

Sad Nuggie Adoption Centre Is Coming to CF Toronto Eaton Centre

The viral Ontario-born plush brand is bringing its pop-up adoption experience to downtown Toronto on May 1st

Lightspeed CEO Dax Dasilva Says Retailers Are Losing Customers in the Last 30 Seconds

The founder of one of the world's leading commerce platforms says self-checkout is quietly undermining the most important moment in the shopping experience — and most retailers haven't noticed yet.

Splitsville Bowl Commits 30,000 SF to Shops at Pickering City Centre as Experiential Retail Reshapes Suburban Shopping Centre

Splitsville Bowl's Fall 2026 opening at the Shops at Pickering City Centre signals a suburban shopping centre’s transformation into an urban hub serving 6,000+ new residents.

Why DL Chicken Chose Harbord Village Over King West

Vancouver's DL Chicken didn't pick its Toronto location by accident. Founder Doug Stephen shares the real story behind the search, the street, and what comes next.

Most Read on 6ix Retail

Hundreds of Starbucks Workers Face Job Loss as Chain Closes Stores Across Toronto

Chain shutters underperforming stores as part of $1B restructuring, leaving baristas seeking new employment

What We Know: Toys “R” Us Canada Files for Creditor Protection

The iconic toy retailer seeks creditor protection after closing more than 50 stores in two years, owing $120 million to vendors as it evaluates strategic alternatives

Photo Report: Yorkdale Shopping Centre Transformation (August 2025)

Exclusive photo tour of Yorkdale Shopping Centre's August 2025 transformation, featuring Simons flagship, luxury corridor expansion, and major tenant changes.

Healthy Planet to Open 12,000 Square Foot Store at Yonge and Eglinton

Canada's largest family-owned organic grocer is opening a 12,000 sq ft two-level store at 2529 Yonge Street, targeting Q1 2026 opening in midtown Toronto.

SHEIN Pop-Up Returns to CF Toronto Eaton Centre Amid Major Retail Transformation

Ten-day pop-up occupies former Banana Republic space as Hudson's Bay fights for survival and Optimize Wealth moves into historic Bank of Toronto building

MUJI to Open Its Latest Toronto Location at The Well This September

Japanese lifestyle retailer takes over former Design Republic space as downtown mixed-use destination continues tenant expansion

Mandy’s Announces Multi-City Expansion, Adding Yonge & Eglinton and Canary District to Toronto Portfolio

Fast-casual chain Mandy's Salads reveals next phase of national expansion, adding new locations in Toronto and Ottawa while growing Montreal presence

EXCLUSIVE: Crunch Fitness Secures Landmark Financial District Location for Downtown Toronto Debut

Crunch Fitness signs 21,000-square-foot lease at 20 King West, transforming historic RBC gold vaults into premium PATH-connected gym targeting Gen Z demographic with fall 2025 opening.

Black Friday’s Latest Date Creates 26-Day Shopping Crunch for Canadian Retailers

Toronto liquidation expert Alex Hennick warns compressed holiday timeline will separate struggling retailers from survivors

Shake Shack Reveals Strategic Six-Site GTA Expansion

Premium burger chain announces six new GTA locations through 2026, creating 400+ jobs while expanding from downtown Toronto to suburban markets across the region.

Discount Grocery Expansion Is Dominating the Toronto Retail Market in 2025

No Frills leads urban push with multiple new locations as Canadian grocers focus on value-oriented growth

NRG Haus to Bring Social Wellness Club to Liberty Village

Fit Factory Fitness founder Ivan Ho bets on sober-curious movement with contrast therapy venue featuring immersive cold plunge and functional mocktails

Decathlon’s GTA Exit Opens Door for Experience-First Retail Revolution

Decathlon Canada closes five GTA stores in Brampton, Burlington, Markham, Scarborough and Vaughan, creating opportunities for experiential sporting goods retailers as Canadian market shifts toward community-focused retail.

Supernatural Sets Sights on Yorkville for Flagship Wellness Location

Innovative wellness concept to introduce hyperbaric therapy and advanced biomarker testing in 4,300-square-foot space

Beyond Points and Purchases: How Starbucks Masters the Science of Personalized Loyalty

Toronto retail loyalty consultant shares insights on how coffee giant's data-driven approach can be applied across sectors

Poulet Rouge Expands to Queen West Amid Transit Construction

Quebec chain's ninth Toronto location joins evolving retail mix as transit construction reshapes prime shopping corridor

Panera Bread To Make Downtown Toronto Comeback with College Street Location (Update: Now Open)

Popular bakery-cafe chain Panera Bread is returning to downtown Toronto with a new location at College and Spadina, marking its first urban presence since 2020.

Photo Report: Yorkdale Shopping Centre Update (December 2025)

Tom Ford, Gentle Monster, and AMI Paris open as luxury corridor expands while Club Monaco Men closes and pop-up strategy fills transitional spaces

In Toronto’s Retail Evolution, Yorkdale Shopping Centre Defines Industry Trends

How Oxford Properties reimagined retail anchors and customer experience to maintain Canada's highest-performing shopping centre

AVANT Opens in Former Nordstrom Rack Space at Yonge and Bloor

Jeff York, former Farm Boy CEO who scaled the grocer from 9 to 49 stores, opens AVANT in Toronto's Yorkville district as part of aggressive national expansion targeting Canada's major markets.