![]() Interior of North Hanover Mall, April 2018 | |
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Location | Hanover, Pennsylvania, United States |
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Coordinates | 39°49′15″N76°59′37″W / 39.82093°N 76.99356°W |
Address | 1155 Carlisle Street |
Opening date | 1967 |
Developer | Crown American |
Management | Mason Asset Management |
Owner | Mason Asset Management |
No. of stores and services | 30 |
No. of anchor tenants | 3 (1 open, 2 vacant) |
Total retail floor area | 452,000 sq ft (42,000 m2) |
No. of floors | 1 (2 in former JCPenney) |
Public transit access | ![]() |
Website | northhanovermall |
North Hanover Mall is a shopping mall in Hanover, Pennsylvania. It is anchored by Burlington, and Rural King.
The mall opened in 1967 as an open-air strip including W.T. Grant, Town & Country (a discount chain then owned by Lane Bryant), Sears, and Food Fair. In 1969 and 1970, it underwent reconstruction to become an enclosed shopping mall, with The Bon-Ton moving from an existing store downtown [1] and JCPenney joining. The Town & Country store became Kmart, which moved out in 1995 to a Superstore nearby that closed in 2004 and became Black Rose Antiques. [2] The Bon-Ton moved out in 2006. [3] After Black Rose Antiques moved out of the mall, construction began in 2007 to demolish the former Black Rose building for a Dick's Sporting Goods, while also demolishing the former Bon-Ton for a two-story Boscov's. [4] Although Boscov's was originally to open in 2008, its opening date was later pushed back to 2009, [5] but in April of that year, the mall's manager confirmed that Boscov's would not be opening in that space. [6] In 2012, JCPenney moved into the space originally planned for Boscov's. [7]
On September 9, 2014, PREIT sold the North Hanover Mall, as well as State College's Nittany Mall, for a combined $32.3 million. It sold the North Hanover Mall as part of a portfolio-improvement initiative it launched in 2012, which involved selling underperforming properties. The 452,000-square-foot North Hanover Mall had sales of $275 per square foot at the end of June and a non-anchor occupancy of 72.8 percent, according to the trust. Sales and occupancy at the mall lagged the trust's portfolio, which had averaged sales of $378 per square foot and non-anchor occupancy of 89.5 percent for the same time period. [8] The buyer of the mall was Mason Asset Management of Great Neck, New York. [9]
On January 4, 2018, it was announced that Sears would be closing as part of a plan to close 103 stores nationwide. The store closed in April 2018. [10] On June 4, 2020, JCPenney announced that this location would be closing on October 18, 2020, as part of a plan to close 154 stores nationwide. [11] A Rural King store opened in the former Sears location in Spring of 2021. Hiring for the new anchor store began in mid-December of 2020. On March 28, 2022, a fire broke out on the roof of the former JCPenney building in one of the HVAC units, causing an estimated $1 million in damage to the building as well as the attached mall. [12] . The former JCPenney has since been demolished. On February 21, 2025, Burlington closed their doors at this location leaving Rural King as the sole operating anchor. [13]
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