Location | Jacksonville, Florida, United States |
---|---|
Coordinates | 30°21′53″N81°40′04″W / 30.364786°N 81.667874°W |
Address | 5000-7 Norwood Ave |
Opening date | 1959 |
Management | Gateway Retail Center LLC |
Owner | Gator Investments |
No. of stores and services | 34 |
No. of anchor tenants | 3 |
Total retail floor area | 700,000 sq ft (65,000 m2) [1] |
No. of floors | 1 |
Parking | Surrounding sectional; free |
Website | gatewaytownctr |
Gateway Town Center (commonly called Gateway Mall or Gateway) is an indoor/outdoor shopping center located in the Jacksonville, Florida neighborhood of Brentwood, just off Interstate 95 (exit 355 and 356) at Golfair Boulevard and Norwood Avenue. Developed in the 1950s, [2] it has 34 stores, and is anchored by Winn Dixie, Burlington and Roses (store). [3]
The mall originally consisted of a strip center with Food Fair, G. C. Murphy, J. C. Penney, Winn Dixie, and W. T. Grant (later May-Cohen's). A 1967 expansion added the enclosed mall, anchored by a new J. C. Penney store and Jefferson Ward, later Zayre.
On October 28th 2019 Publix announced they would close the Gateway store leaving the center without an anchor. On November 26th Winn Dixie was approved into the Publix spot (Publix had not moved and Closed on December 28th 2019.) [4] [5] On February 12th 2020 Winn Dixie reopened in the former Publix store. [6]
A strip mall, strip center, strip plaza or simply plaza is a type of shopping center common in North America and Australia where the stores are arranged in a row, with a footpath in front. Strip malls are typically developed as a unit and have large parking lots in front. Many of them face major traffic arterials and tend to be self-contained with few pedestrian connections to surrounding neighborhoods. Smaller strip malls may be called mini-malls, while larger ones may be called power centers or big box centers. In 2013, The New York Times reported that the United States had 65,840 strip malls. In 2020, The Wall Street Journal wrote that in the United States, despite the continuing retail apocalypse starting around 2010, investments and visitor numbers were increasing to strip malls.
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