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Somerset Collection is a shopping mall of more than 180 retailers located in Troy, Michigan, part of Metro Detroit. Somerset Collection is developed, managed, and co-owned by The Forbes Company, [ 1 ] and is among the most profitable malls in the United States not owned by a real estate investment trust . [ 2 ] (
Somerset Collection in the Detroit suburb of Troy. The history of shopping malls in Michigan began in 1954. That year, the Hudson's department store chain and architect Victor Gruen developed Northland Center in the Detroit suburb of Southfield. [1]
Somerset Mall may refer to: Somerset Collection (formerly Somerset Mall), an upscale mall in Michigan, US; Somerset Mall (South Africa), ...
Somerset Center is an unincorporated community in Hillsdale County in the U.S. state of Michigan. [1] The community is located along U.S. Highway 12 (US 12) within Somerset Township . As an unincorporated community, Somerset Center has no legally defined boundaries or population statistics of its own but does have its own post office with the ...
Great Lakes Crossing Outlets, formerly Great Lakes Crossing, is a shopping mall in Auburn Hills, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, Michigan, United States.The site of the mall was originally to have been occupied by a different mall called Auburn Mills, which was never built due to financial issues of its intended developer, Western Development Corporation.
Livonia Marketplace is an open-air shopping mall in the Detroit suburb of Livonia, Michigan.Opened in 2010, the center is anchored by Kohl's and Walmart.It occupies the site of the former Livonia Mall, which was an enclosed mall built in 1964.
Northland Center was an enclosed shopping mall on an approximately 159-acre (64 ha) site located near the intersection of M-10 (the John C. Lodge Freeway) and Greenfield Road in Southfield, Michigan, an inner-ring suburb of Detroit, Michigan, United States. Construction began in 1952 and the mall opened on March 22, 1954.
Parisian opened its first Michigan location at the mall in August 1994. The store was part of a 150,000-square-foot (14,000 m 2) expansion that included additional mall space at the northern end. [5] Jacobson's declared bankruptcy and closed the last of its stores in 2002, with its store at Laurel Park Place replaced a year later by Von Maur.