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Quail Springs Mall is a super-regional shopping mall and trade area located in far northern Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, which opened on October 23, 1980.It contains three major department store anchors (originally had four anchor stores until 2016), a 24-screen AMC Theatre, Round One Entertainment, Blue Zoo Aquarium, and a total of 111 tenants comprising a total of approximately 1,115,000 square ...
Remnants of the city's auto history still exist in Automobile Alley including urban show-palaces for Mercedes Benz of Oklahoma City, Jaguar of Oklahoma City, and Volvo of Oklahoma City, and the Bob Moore Auto Group is located nearby in MidTown. Today, these luxury icons of the automobile industry coexist alongside numerous retail shops ...
50 Penn Place is an upscale mixed-use complex in the inner Northwest part of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.The galleria-style shopping mall and tower is located at 1900 Northwest Expressway in the Penn Square trade area immediately at Interstate 44 and Northwest Expressway, across from Penn Square Mall near the exclusive suburb of Nichols Hills.
1909 Caledonia, Missouri. This circa 1909 country store aims to transport visitors back to a "simpler time" with nostalgic touches like its homemade ice cream, antique gallery, Amish-made fudge ...
The Audi 80 is a compact executive car produced by the Audi subdivision of the Volkswagen Group across four generations from 1966 to 1996. It shared its platform with the Volkswagen Passat from 1973 to 1986 and was available as a saloon, and station wagon — the latter marketed by Audi as the Avant.
photo of entrance of Shepherd Center (formerly Shepherd Mall) Shepherd Mall is a former shopping mall located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma that opened in 1964 [6] as the first fully-enclosed indoor shopping mall in Oklahoma City; [7] however, by 2003 all of the anchors had closed and the mall was well underway in transitioning to being primarily an office complex.
John Dunkin moved from Oklahoma City to Tulsa to operate the store. However, B-D was an entity of its own and there was no formal connection with the Oklahoma City company. In 1959, a director of the First National Bank of St. Louis, asked Willard Dillard, owner of the Dillard's department store chain, to consider buying Brown-Dunkin.
Fawn and Fox Books is a small pop-up bookstore focused on community engagement in rural Oklahoma.