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Ahead of the holiday shopping season, the Detroit Free Press compiled a list of store openings in Detroit's downtown, Midtown and other neighborhoods.
The shopping center would have been Michigan's first shopping center constructed on 8 Mile and Kelly Road but the idea was scrapped. The mall was developed in 1957 by Hudson's, a Detroit-based department store chain (and corporate predecessor of Target Corp) that also developed Northland Center, another Detroit area mall.
Detroit: Enclosed 57 Regional Tourist theme General Motors The Mall of Monroe: Monroe: 620,411 sq ft (57,600 m 2) Enclosed 50 Regional Cafaro Company: Green Oak Village Place: Brighton: 550,000 sq ft (51,100 m 2) Open-air 46 Lifestyle center
Montclair Place is a 1,200,000 square feet (110,000 m 2) indoor shopping mall in Montclair, California. The mall was known as Montclair Plaza until 2015. The mall features JCPenney , and Macy's , in addition to an AMC DINE-IN Theatre
The exterior of the Metropolitan Building in downtown Detroit, where The Somerset Collection will open a pop-up store called the Luxury Locker Room on April 17, 2024, in time for the NFL draft.
Renaissance Center – Detroit (1977–present) RiverTown Crossings – Grandville (1999–present) Rogers Plaza – Wyoming (1961–present) The Shops at Westshore – Holland (1988–present) Somerset Collection – Troy (1969–present) Southland Center – Taylor (1970–present) Summit Place Mall – Waterford Township (1962–2009)
The Mall at Partridge Creek is an open-air shopping center in Clinton Township, a suburb of Detroit, Michigan, United States. The mall opened to the public on October 18, 2007. The mall features the large-scale traditional retailer L.L.Bean in addition to a Cooper's Hawk, Brio Tuscan Grille, P. F. Chang's, and a large 14-screen MJR Theatres.
An interior entrance to the Macy's store in May 2015. This was taken before the store opened for the day. Southland Center, planned by Detroit-based Hudson's as early as 1962, [2] was designed by Victor Gruen Associates and Louis G. Redstone Associates, and the newly formed Dayton-Hudson Corporation (a merger of Hudson's and Dayton's of Minneapolis) developed the mall. [3]