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The mall has over 225 retailers and an 18-screen AMC movie theater organized into five "neighborhoods." [3] Major tenants include Nordstrom Rack, Costco, Burlington, Marshalls & HomeGoods, JCPenney, American Freight, TJ Maxx, Bloomingdales Outlet, AMC Potomac Mills 18, The Children's Place, Nike Factory Outlet, Forever 21, Camille La Vie, H&M, ZavaZone, Hot Topic, BoxLunch, Five Below, Bath ...
In 2012, a plot of forested area beside Stonebridge was chosen to be the new Potomac Nationals stadium, replacing their current home at Pfitzner Stadium along with a commuter parking garage. [3] However, in 2017, plans for this stadium were cancelled and the team moved to Fredericksburg to a new stadium in 2020, and plans for only the commuter ...
Image of the Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse. The "Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse", located at 2903 Columbia Pike, is the only remaining theater in Arlington County, Virginia from the cinema boom period of the 1930s and 1940s that still operates as a movie theater, and is currently one of four movie theaters operating in Arlington County.
Jim Boscov, chairman and CEO of Boscov's, assured co-workers at the Woodbridge Center store Friday that Boscov's will remain at the mall, even though few details about the mall's future have been ...
In 2023, A Biltmore Christmas was released as part of Hallmark’s holiday movie lineup, highlighting the wonder and beauty of the largest privately owned house in the United States. Located in ...
Woodbridge is about 20 miles (32 km) from Washington, D.C. The 2010 census reconfigured Woodbridge so that the majority of its land area was redesignated Marumsco and Neabsco, Virginia. The southern border of Woodbridge was now Occoquan Road, with the area between Occoquan Road and Opitz Boulevard–Rippon Boulevard being part of Marumsco.
Dale City was the idea of a real estate developer, Cecil Don Hylton, who chose the term because it aptly describes the "hills and dales" of the rolling Virginia Piedmont, [5] where he developed the community. Hylton began his career as a "huckster", a young man who sold farm goods and produce at the farmers' market in Washington, DC.
In 1946 Herschel C. Borden constructed the current building, which was known as the Bordon-Lee Theatre or Middletown Movie Theatre until 1961. [1] [3] The building was subdivided, with the first floor containing the movie theatre, a pharmacy, and a store. The second floor contained an apartment in the back of the building where Borden lived for ...