Location | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 43°02′26″N76°03′51″W / 43.0406°N 76.06411°W |
Opening date | 1954 (as a strip mall, then enclosed in 1973) |
Closing date | March 2020 |
Developer | Eagan Real Estate Inc. |
Owner | Onondaga County, New York |
No. of stores and services | 0 |
No. of anchor tenants | 0 |
Total retail floor area | 988,054 sq ft (91,793 m2) |
No. of floors | 2 |
Website | www |
ShoppingTown Mall was a regional shopping mall in Dewitt, New York. First opened as an open-air shopping center in 1954, it was enclosed in 1973 and remained a major shopping center before no longer being part of Dewitt in March 2020 to make way for a new $400 million development, which will be named District East. Much of the existing mall will be demolished for a phased development that includes a substantial residential component, a movie theater complex, retail space and offices, as well as new sidewalks, bike paths, walking trails, and large park and green space that will serve as a spearhead to the Empire State Trail. [1] [2]
Shoppingtown Mall began as an open-air shopping center, first announced in August 1953 and managed by Eagan Real Estate Inc. At this time, tenants including F. W. Woolworth, J. C. Penney, Walgreens, Grand Union, Acme Markets, Fanny Farmer, Endicott Johnson, and Kinney Shoes had already signed on to the project. [3] Local Syracuse department store Addis' signed onto the project in February 1954, and later that month a four-day grand opening gala was announced, set to begin March 3. [4] [5] The center opened as planned on March 3 with most major tenants, with Addis opening later on October 8, 1954. [6] [7] Multiple new stores, including Flah & Co, W. T. Grant, and a Kallet Theater, began construction in 1955–1956. [8] [9]
A Dey's Store For Homes was first announced in 1960, with plans for the home store to open by 1961, with a full store projected to open at a later date. [10] The home store opened August 25, 1962, followed by the full store which opened on October 11, 1966. [11] [12] The center was affected by a fire in April 1967, which most affected Flah & Co, who remained closed for over a month to completely restock and remodel the store. [13] [14] A branch store of Syracuse department store E.W. Edwards & Sons opened in November 1968. [15] A new 2-screen Kallet Theater opened December 28, 1968. [16]
Shoppingtown began conversion into an "all-climate mall" in late 1973, with Edwards planned to be one of the anchors, though Edwards closed its doors amidst bankruptcy in November 1973. [17] The mall suffered a fire in June 1974, which fatally injured one firefighter and caused an estimated $500,000 in damages, primarily to W.T. Grant. [18] The two-screen Kallet theater was purchased by Carrols Development Corp in 1974, and operated as a Cinema National. [19] Woolworth also announced the closure of its Shoppingtown store on December 31, 1974. [20] Rumored since shortly after the store's closing in 1973, J. C. Penney opened a new, larger store in the former Edwards in January 1975. [21] [22] Both Flah & Co and Addis' opened new stores at the mall, said to be double the size of their previous locations in the center. [23] The mall opened on August 4, 1975, with a week-long grand opening ceremony. [24]
Woolworth's re-joined the mall in August 1978, taking over the former W.T. Grant space. [25] The mall added a 57,000 sq ft (5,300 m2) Chappell's as an anchor in October 1984. [26] Addis merged with Dey Brothers in May 1989, with plans to close the Addis store at the mall, and merge operations into the existing Dey Brothers store. [27] Shortly after this, Wilmorite Properties gained control of the mall through a partnership with Eagan in Summer 1989, announcing a major remodel later that year. [28]
The remodel was completed at a cost of $53 million in 1991, adding a new wing which included a relocated Addis & Dey store and a food court, with the original Addis & Dey store being split between TJ Maxx in 1991 and Steinbach's in 1992. [29] [30] Addis & Dey announced the closure of their Shoppingtown Mall store amidst bankruptcy in 1992. [31] Shortly thereafter in early 1993, Kaufmann's announced it would relocate from Fayetteville Mall to the former Addis & Dey space. [32] Woolworth's closed for the second and final time in early 1993. [33] Steinbach's closed July 1, 1994, after recording hundreds of thousands in losses at the store, and TJ Maxx relocated to the Fayetteville Mall. [29] Sears took over both floors of the former Addis & Dey space, in addition to building a new auto center. [34] Media Play was announced in April 1994, taking over the former Woolworth's and Kallet Theater spaces for a 48,000 sq ft (4,500 m2) location. [35] The Bon-Ton came to the mall with their acquisition of Chappell's in late 1994. [36]
Old Navy opened in January 2000, and Dick's Sporting Goods was announced in March that year. [37] [38] ShoppingTown Mall was one of several properties sold to Macerich by Wilmorite in late 2004 for $2.3 billion. [39] Kaufmann's became Macy's in September, 2006. [40] [41] [42] [43] In March 2007, Macerich announced plans to create an open-air plaza with new shops facing Erie Boulevard East in the Sears wing, though this never materialized perhaps due to the economic recession. [44] [45] [46]
The later 2010s saw the closure of several traditional department store retailers. In March 2015, Macy's, which maintains a much larger outpost at Destiny USA, announced that they would close their location at the mall to focus on their highest achieving locations. In October 2015, Dick's Sporting Goods relocated to a nearby DeWitt Commons. [47] [48] On April 8, 2016, JCPenney announced that they were closing. On September 2, 2018, Sears announced that their ShoppingTown Mall location would close, leaving the mall without any anchor stores. [49] [50] [51] Moonbeam Capital served eviction notices to all remaining tenants in September 2020 to make way for a new $400 million development, which will be named District East. Much of the existing mall will be demolished for a phased development that includes a substantial residential component, a movie theater complex, a "premium" grocer, specialty retail, and services like doctors and medical offices. The project will also include new sidewalks, bike paths, walking trails, and large park and green space that will serve as a spearhead to the recently enhanced Empire State Trail. [1] [2]
Destiny USA is a six-story, automobile-oriented super-regional shopping, dining, and entertainment complex on the shore of Onondaga Lake in the city of Syracuse, New York. It is the largest shopping mall in the state of New York and the 9th largest in the country. In 2021, Destiny USA was included among the top 20 most visited shopping centers in America, attracting over 26 million visitors a year.
Penn-Can Mall was a mall in the town of Cicero, New York, north of Syracuse. It opened on March 28, 1976. It was the first enclosed mall on the north end of Syracuse, and the fourth mall to be built in the entire metropolitan area. It was constructed by the Winmar Company of Seattle, Washington, and had room for 86 stores. At the mall's inception, only 28 stores were open, but the other spaces quickly followed, followed by even more during an expansion in 1986, putting the mall's store count to 121. The mall also had a smaller upper level with a few small shops and a Loews Cinema. There was also an old European clock in the center court of the mall. Today the mall, including its clock, is home to a multi-franchise "auto mall" known as Driver's Village.
Arden Fair is a two-level regional shopping mall located on Arden Way in Sacramento, California, United States. It consists of over 165 tenants, encompassing over 1,100,000 square feet (100,000 m2) of retail space. The mall features Macy's and JCPenney as anchor stores. It is operated by the premier development firm Macerich.
Franklin Park Mall is a shopping mall in Toledo, Ohio. The anchor stores are Dillard's, Macy's, Dick's Sporting Goods, Forever 21, DSW, and JCPenney.
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Parkway Plaza is a shopping mall in El Cajon, California. The mall's anchor stores are Crunch Fitness, Dick's Sporting Goods, Ashley HomeStore, Bob's Discount Furniture, Burlington, Extra Space Storage, Walmart, Regal Cinemas, and JCPenney.
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Stonewood Center, sometimes referred to as Stonewood Mall, is a shopping mall located in Downey, California, which is one of the Gateway Cities of Southeastern Los Angeles County. It is located at the intersection of Firestone and Lakewood Boulevards, and it is from this intersection that the mall's name is derived. It is within a few miles of many freeways in the area: I-5 and I-605, I-710 and I-105 freeways. The mall is owned and operated by The Macerich Company and is part of its trifecta of malls in southeast Los Angeles County along with the Los Cerritos Center in Cerritos and the Lakewood Center in Lakewood. Stonewood Center comprises 145 stores, including several restaurants.
Chappell's was a family-owned department store chain based in Syracuse, New York. It opened in 1896 and remained in business until 1994. At its peak, it operated ten stores in the Syracuse area, Cortland, Watertown and Massena. In no particular order, malls that had a Chappell's store included Great Northern Mall ; Western Lights Plaza ; Northern Lights ; Shoppingtown Mall ; Penn-Can Mall ; Carousel Center ; Shop City Plaza ; Fingerlakes Mall ; Seneca Mall ; Salmon Run Mall. There was also a stand alone store in downtown Syracuse.
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Staunton Mall was a shopping mall in Augusta County, Virginia, United States. It was slightly outside the city limits of Staunton, Virginia. Opened in 1968 as Staunton Plaza, it originally featured J. C. Penney, Montgomery Ward, Woolworth, and Safeway as its major stores. An expansion plan between 1985 and 1987 enclosed the formerly open-air property while adding Leggett as a third department store and renaming the property to Staunton Mall. The mall underwent a number of anchor store changes throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s: Safeway became an outlet store for Sears, then Goody's and Gold's Gym, while Woolworth was converted to Stone & Thomas and then to Peebles, and Montgomery Ward became Steve & Barry's. The mall lost many inline stores throughout the 21st century, and passed through several owners before closing on January 1, 2021.
The Centre at Salisbury is an 862,000-square-foot (80,082 m2) super regional mall in Salisbury, Maryland. The mall is the only regional shopping mall in a 60-mile (97 km) radius. The mall's anchor stores include Boscov's, Burlington, and Dick's Sporting Goods. It also features a 16 screen cinema stadium-style Regal Cinemas movie theater. The Centre at Salisbury is the largest shopping mall on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.
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