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The 1990 expansion of Mid Rivers Mall included a new anchor store, Sears. Another expansion of Mid Rivers Mall in 1996 added the fourth anchor, JCPenney, [7] which moved from nearby Mark Twain Mall in St. Charles. [8] In 1999, Wehrenberg demolished the mall's 6-screen theater and built a new 14-screen megaplex. [9]
The 1960s and 1970s saw another surge in the industry. Multiplexes, theaters with two to six screens, became the popular choice of movie-goers. Wehrenberg's Cinema Four Center in St. Charles was the first multiplex in the St. Louis area. In the late 1980s and into the 1990s, the circuit started building megaplexes of ten or more screens.
[14] In 1988, May Centers almost sold La Jolla Village Square to T&S Development, ... Mid-Rivers Mall, South County Center, and West County Center were sold in 2007.
Rouse Properties Adds Regal Cinemas as Anchor Tenant at Three Rivers Mall NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Rouse Properties, Inc. (NYS: RSE) , a national owner and operator of regional enclosed malls ...
Two Rivers Park will be located west of the future Market District in the East Village of Des Moines. ... Lown said the cost for maintaining Two Rivers Park is estimated to be $300,000 a year.
Rappin' #5 May 10 – May 16 #14 May 17–23. Mario Van Peebles, Rutanya Alda; Moon over Pittsburgh; Silent Witness; 1986. Gung Ho #1 Mar. 14–20 Top 5 Mar. 21 – Apr. 24 Top 10 until May 29. Michael Keaton, John Turturro, George Wendt, Mimi Rogers; The Majorettes; The Suicide Squeeze; Flight of the Spruce Goose; 1987
The mall was first announced in May 1976, to be development by a joint effort of Hess's and the Montgomery Development Company of Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania.The mall would feature Hess's and another unnamed department store as anchors, with 40 smaller stores and a twin-screen cinema, with Hess's set to open before the rest of the mall. [2]
Ward Parkway Center is the location of the first modern movie multiplex, with its original two screens (since renovated and expanded to 14 screens) still operated by AMC Theatres. Originally a tiny two-screen theater located near Montgomery Ward , later expanded to the new complex.