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Findlay Mall (Formerly known as Findlay Village Mall) was an enclosed shopping mall in Findlay, Ohio. Opened in 1962, it features Dunham's Sports, Stock + Field, and Best Buy as its anchor stores. It is owned by Kohan Retail Investment Group. The mall closed on January 31, 2025.
The city's major shopping center is Findlay Village Mall, opened in 1962. Findlay is home to the Whirlpool dishwasher manufacturing plant and distribution center. This plant is considered to be the largest dishwasher plant in the world (based on production). [30] Findlay is home to several other major distribution centers, including Best Buy ...
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The Toledo North Towne Square and Woodville Mall stores have since closed, and Findlay store was relocated to the Findlay Village Mall by Elder-Beerman in the late 1980s. The only remaining former Lasalle's store was the Elder-Beerman at Westgate Village, which closed in 2018 with the chain and was torn down in 2023.
Findlay Village Mall; Fort Steuben Mall; G. Great Lakes Mall; The Greene Town Center; I. Indian Mound Mall; L. Liberty Center (mall) Lima Mall; M. The Mall at ...
Severance Center which pioneered the enclosed shopping mall in Ohio was unable to compete with automobile-centric convenient big box retail or the renovated and expanded Beachwood Place and Richmond Town Square. With both Dillard's branches shuttered in 1995, declining occupancy, and rising criminal activity in and around the mall, plans ...
Clearview Mall in Butler, PA was taken over by Kohan in June 2020. [42] Findlay Village Mall was sold to Kohan for $4 million in September 2020. [43] Kohan purchased the Burnsville Center's debt at auction for $18 million in October 2020. [44] The Outlets of Little Rock were purchased for $10 million in January 2021. [45]
Retail developer Jonathan Woodner first announced plans for Swifton Center in 1951, and sold his stake in the mall to Stahl Development in 1954. [2] The site chosen for the center was the southeast corner of Reading Road (U.S. Route 42) and Seymour Avenue within the city limits of Cincinnati, Ohio, a site determined by market analysts to be the center of population for the Cincinnati market at ...