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Columbia Heights is a neighborhood in Washington, D.C., located in Northwest D.C. Bounded by 16th Street NW, W Street NW, Florida Avenue NW, Barry Place NW, Sherman Avenue NW, Spring Road NW, and New Hampshire Avenue NW. neighborhood is an important retail hub for the area, as home to DC USA mall and to numerous other restaurants and stores, primarily along the highly commercialized 14th Street.
DC USA is an 890,000-square-foot (83,000 m 2) vertical power center, i.e. a multilevel enclosed urban shopping center anchored by big box stores. It is located in the Columbia Heights neighborhood of Washington, D.C. A Washington City Paper poll named DC USA the "Best Designed Retail Space" of 2009. [1]
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Oak Park Mall – Overland Park (1974–present; largest mall in Kansas and the Kansas City Metropolitan Area) Town Center Plaza – Leawood (1996–present; outdoor mall; former home of the only Jacobson's department store in both Kansas City and the state of Kansas) Towne East Square – Wichita (1975–present)
Columbia Heights may refer to one of these United States locations: Columbia Heights (Washington, D.C.), a neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Columbia Heights (WMATA station), a Metro station in Washington, D.C. Columbia Heights, Minnesota, a city in Anoka County; Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, a street in New York City
Gallery Place is a small urban power center in Downtown Washington, D.C. in D.C.'s Chinatown and also in the F Street shopping district, the traditional downtown shopping and entertainment area.
on F from 6th to 7th, south side, the former flagship of Hecht's department store [6] 1316–1324 7th St NW (W side north of N), Harry Kaufman's Stores department store; 7th and K (SW corner, 706 K St NW): site of Hahn's shoe emporium, flagship of a regional chain; 7th Street both sides of K: Goldberg's department store (912–928 7th St., 706 ...
The Collection is a set of shops and restaurants near the Friendship Heights Metro station on Wisconsin Avenue in Chevy Chase, Maryland, along the Washington, D.C.-Maryland border. [2] [3] [4] The shopping center was developed by the Chevy Chase Land Company, a privately owned development corporation that has owned the land for more than a century.