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[10] [30] Boscov's department store, whose owner, Al Boscov, was a member of Steamtown Mall Partners, planned to bid for the mall at the auction or purchase it beforehand, but could not reach an agreement. [30] [31] Out of 43 Boscov's locations, the location at Steamtown was the 5th-best performing with annual sales of $31 million.
Boscov's first entered the Philadelphia market in the late 1980s by opening Ports of the World stores. [12] These stores would later be re-branded as Boscov's sometime in the mid-1990s. In 1983, Boscov's leased the Fowler's department store building and opened the next year in downtown Binghamton, New York .
The Bon-Ton closed in late April 2018, leaving Boscov's as the mall's only remaining anchor. [36] [37] Higher Hope Church used the former J. C. Penney for their meetings. [38] Family Practice Center took over the former Sears space, and remodeled it into a clinic with a 50-year lease. [39]
Dick's Sporting Goods were formerly Kaufmann's, Gimbels, and Boscov's). The mall features more than 134 specialty stores. The mall also houses a food court and several professional offices. Located across the street from Macy's is the South Hills Village light rail station. This terminal opened for revenue service in July 1985.
A study of Iowa's farmers' markets showed that 140 jobs were created in a single year that could be attributed to farmers' market activity. [14] Other studies also found that farmers' market activity directly and indirectly supports the growth of local jobs. [15] One study showed that 5.4 jobs were created per farmers' market.
The Boscov's store at Lebanon Valley Mall was the first Boscov's location to be opened outside of Berks County. [ 5 ] The Lebanon Valley Mall Company, a real estate development group owned by parent company Boscov's, [ 2 ] oversaw construction of this mall on U.S. Route 422 on the west side of town.
In 2008, Boscov's filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, causing 10 stores to close, the Harrisburg Mall location being one of them. [6] The building has been vacant since. On July 9, 2009, the Harrisburg Mall was sold at sheriff's sale to three financial groups after the previous owner, Feldman Lubert Adler defaulted on a $52.5 million mortgage. [ 7 ]
A woman and her husband at stall at the market in November 1942. Each week approximately 3,000 people visit the market, with 82 percent of these people living and/or working in Lancaster and an additional 33 percent of them living within the same zip code as the Central Market. Vendors offer a wide variety of international and Amish cuisine foods