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Gilroy Premium Outlets; Great Mall of the Bay Area [10] Las Americas Premium Outlets; Napa Premium Outlets; Ontario Mills [10] The Outlets at Orange [10] Petaluma Village Premium Outlets; Pismo Beach Premium Outlets; San Francisco Premium Outlets; Santa Rosa Plaza [10] The Shops at Mission Viejo [10] Stanford Shopping Center [10] Stoneridge ...
The mall is situated on Illinois Route 59 between U.S. 34 and East New York Street / West Aurora Avenue, with 8,006 car parking spaces. [10] The area around the mall has been developed on the east and west sides of the road, with Westridge Court featuring over 30 stores on the Naperville side of Route 59.
The Outlets at Wind Creek Bethlehem – Bethlehem (2011–present) Oxford Valley Mall – Middletown Township (1973–present) Palmer Park Mall – Easton (1973–present) Park City Center – Lancaster (1971–present) Parkway Center Mall – Pittsburgh (1982–2013) Philadelphia Premium Outlets – Limerick Township (2007–present, outdoor)
Across the Fox River, I-88/IL 110 meet another toll plaza. Then, the tollway meets Farnsworth Avenue at a six-ramp parclo near the Chicago Premium Outlets, Eola Road, IL 59 at a diverging diamond interchange, Winfield Road at a diamond interchange, Naperville Road at a mix of partial interchanges, and IL 53 at an incomplete parclo. Beyond that ...
The Middle Avenue Historic District is an industrial historic district located on two square blocks in downtown Aurora, Illinois.The district includes eleven buildings, eight of which are contributing buildings to its historic nature.
The expanded Prime Outlets held a ribbon-cutting ceremony at midnight on Black Friday, November 24, 2006. [19] Prime Outlets was purchased by Simon Property Group in September 2010, and the malls were added to Simon's Premium Outlets division. With the change in ownership, the mall was renamed Pleasant Prairie Premium Outlets. [20]
Aurora indeed expanded rapidly during that period, almost doubling in population from 1860 to 1874. Most of the new lands were along the river, with a section following several streets westward. Industrial growth followed in the 1880s, spurring a need for developed city services. Aurora became the first city to have electric street lighting in ...
[1] in 2004, Michaels opened across the street from the shopping center on Aurora Avenue. in 2005, Homemakers closed its Naperville Location. [2] in 2006, Cub Foods closed all of its Chicago area locations and in 2007, CompUSA closed its Naperville store. DSW moved to Springbrook Prairie Pavilion in 2008.