Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Eastgate Consumer Mall, originally Eastgate Shopping Center, was a shopping mall located in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, at the corner of Washington Street and Shadeland Avenue. It was originally an outdoor mall featuring Sears , JCPenney , and H. P. Wasson and Company ; a re-development in 1981 changed it from a conventional shopping ...
Eastgate Consumer Mall – Indianapolis (1972–2004) Eastland Mall – Evansville (1981–present) The Fashion Mall at Keystone – Indianapolis (1973–present) Five Points Mall – Marion (1978–2019) Glenbrook Square – Fort Wayne (1980–present) Glendale Mall – Indianapolis (1970–2007) Green Tree Mall – Clarksville (1968–present)
Eastgate is a neighborhood on the east side of Indianapolis located within the I-465 loop, and bounded on the north by E. 16th Street, on the south by E. Washington Street, on the east by Franklin Road, and on the west by Shadeland Avenue. [1]
Eastgate Consumer Mall; Eastland Mall (Evansville, Indiana) Erskine Village; F. The Fashion Mall at Keystone; Five Points Mall; G. Glenbrook Square; Glendale Town Center;
Eastgate Mall over I-805 Bridge, San Diego County, California, U.S. Eastgate Shopping Centre (Basildon) , Essex, England Eastgate Shopping Centre (Bondi Junction) , New South Wales, Australia
Boot Barn is one of the stores coming to the Consumer Centre on Route 36 in West Long Branch, filling the empty Chuck E. Cheese. ... Norman's Hallmark closed its store at Monmouth Mall and opened ...
L.S. Ayres (now Macy's) is one of Glenbrook Square's original anchors, in continuous operation since the mall's opening. The building for JCPenney was added in the 1976 expansion. An A&P grocery store was also an original tenant. It closed when A&P left Fort Wayne in the 1970s, and in 2007 the Barnes & Noble store opened in that area (it was ...
Southtown Mall was an enclosed shopping mall in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Opened in 1969, it closed in 2003 due to declining traffic. Opened in 1969, it closed in 2003 due to declining traffic. Anchor stores once included J. C. Penney , Montgomery Ward (later Kohl's ), Wolf & Dessauer (later L. S. Ayres ), Sears , and Service Merchandise .