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McAlister Square is an American repositioned shopping mall in Greenville, South Carolina. It is notable for being the first enclosed shopping center in South Carolina, [1] and the largest shopping center in the state at the time it was built. It is now a hybrid property, with the largest tenant being the University Center of Greenville.
Haywood Mall is a shopping mall in Greenville, South Carolina, United States. The mall is the largest in the state, with 1,237,411 square feet (114,959.2 m 2 ) of retail space. The super-regional mall opened in 1980 at the intersection of Haywood Road and I-385/Golden Strip Freeway .
The Magnolia Park Town Center was originally built as the Greenville Mall, in planning as early as 1974 when Montgomery Ward was secured as its first anchor. [1] In 1976, J. B. White was secured as a second anchor, along with the mall as a whole being announced with a planned 78 stores. [1]
How did Bal Harbour Access Shops Pop Up arrive in Greenville? In 2023, a similar style Bal Harbour Pop Up shop came to the Six Forks area in Raleigh, North Carolina, showcasing high-end shops and ...
The following is a list of properties owned by Brookfield Properties, a North American commercial real estate company.Their portfolio includes a number of shopping malls in the United States that were owned by GGP Inc. (General Growth Properties) before it was acquired by Brookfield in 2018, [1] along with a number of malls that were formerly owned by Rouse Properties prior to its buyout by ...
Haywood Mall – Greenville (1980–present) Inlet Square Mall – Murrells Inlet (1990–2024) Magnolia Mall – Florence (1979–present) Greenville Mall – Greenville (1978–2007) The Mall at Shelter Cove – Hilton Head Island (1988–2013) McAlister Square – Greenville (1968–present) Myrtle Beach Mall – Briarcliffe Acres (1986 ...
Carolina Place Mall in Pineville is the latest Charlotte-area mall to face significant financial challenges. Carolina Place’s original 2013 loan was for $175 million at a fixed interest rate of ...
Chosen as anchor stores for the mall were Belk, JCPenney, and Meyers-Arnold, a regional department store based out of Greenville, South Carolina. [2] Overall, the mall held space for over 38 stores in 350,000 square feet (33,000 m 2) of retail space. It was the first major retail development along the Highway 72 bypass. [3]