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Lake Forest Plaza – New Orleans East (1974–2005) Lakeside Shopping Center – Metairie (1969–present) Mall of Louisiana – Baton Rouge (1997–present) Mall St. Vincent – Shreveport (1977–present) New Orleans Centre – New Orleans (1988–2005) North Shore Square – Slidell (1985–2019) Oakwood Center – Gretna (1966–present)
Mall of the Bluffs was a shopping mall in Council Bluffs, Iowa, United States. Built in 1986, the mall featured J. C. Penney , Dillard's , Sears , and Target as its anchor stores at its peak. After both JCPenney and Target moved to other developments in Council Bluffs, it began a sharp decline in tenancy throughout the 2010s.
The state of Louisiana is served by the following area codes: 225, which serves the Baton Rouge area and parts of south central Louisiana; 318, which serves northern Louisiana; 337, which serves southwestern Louisiana; 504, which serves the New Orleans area; 985, which serves the sections of southeast Louisiana which are not within the 504 area ...
The Outlet Collection at Riverwalk, previously known as Riverwalk Marketplace until 2014, is an outlet mall located in the Central Business District of New Orleans, Louisiana. It is located along the Mississippi River waterfront, stretching from the base of Canal Street , upriver to the New Orleans Morial Convention Center , and is connected to ...
Pages in category "Shopping malls in the New Orleans metropolitan area" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Canal Street store was closed in 1982 by the City Stores Company and reopened in 1984. In 1993, the New Orleans-based sludge metal band Eyehategod used the 13th floor of the building for the recording of their second album, Take as Needed for Pain. [6] In 1997 work began to use the upper floors as part of a new Ritz-Carlton hotel.
When the economy hit the skids in the 1980s with the loss of the oil business, New Orleans East became less affluent. Many residents fled to the North Shore/Slidell area, which wound up with its own mall, (North Shore Square), which had many of the same anchors and mall stores as Lake Forest. Sears was the first large anchor to close at the Plaza.
Lakeside Shopping Center is the highest-grossing mall in the New Orleans metropolitan area. [citation needed] In the 1970s and early 1980s, an area of bars and nightclubs opened in a section of Metairie known as "Fat City", which is now the most racially diverse area in the New Orleans metropolitan area and is home to a vibrant restaurant scene.