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El Con Center is an open-air shopping mall in the city of Tucson, Arizona, United States anchored by Cinemark Theatres, Target, The Home Depot, Walmart, Ross (30,220 ft. 2 [2]), Burlington (65,680 ft. 2 [3]), and Marshalls. [4] There is 1 vacant anchor store that was once JCPenney.
The Broadway–Valley shopping center, as it was then known, opened on October 10, 1955, as a single strip of stores along Van Nuys Blvd. north of Roscoe Blvd, with 89,000 square feet (8,300 m 2) of retail space adjacent to and sharing a parking lot with a 226,000-square-foot (21,000 m 2) Broadway department store designed by architect Welton Becket.
As the Supercenter proved to be a much more profitable experiment, Walmart renamed the stores "Wal-Mart's Hypermart USA" in April 1990, and eventually began either converting them to Supercenter operations or closing them. As of 2023, two of the former Hypermart USA locations still operate as Walmarts while the other two have been demolished.
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During the week of February 10, foot traffic to Target dropped 3.9% and 1.4% to Walmart. Foot traffic to Costco, which has stood by its DEI policies, increased 4.6%.
Metrocenter was a regional enclosed shopping mall in northwest Phoenix, Arizona.It was bounded by Interstate 17, 31st, Dunlap and Peoria Avenues.Before its closure, the three most recently open anchor stores were Harkins Theatres, Walmart Supercenter, and Dillard's Clearance Center; three additional vacant anchor stores included former Sears, JCPenney, and Macy's locations.
3333 Broadway (formerly Riverside Park Community) is a group of five apartment buildings ranging from 11 to 35 stories at Broadway between West 133rd and 135th Streets, in Manhattanville, Manhattan, New York City, United States. Completed in 1976, it was the largest residential structure in the United States.
In November 2001, the mall was renamed Phoenix Spectrum Mall, [4] and Grossman Company Properties began a $10 million renovation project. The mall changed its focus to discount stores, starting with the demolition of The Broadway and replacement by Walmart (originally built as a discount store, later expanded into a Supercenter) in 1994. [5]