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Eastland Center was an enclosed shopping mall located in the city of Harper Woods, an inner-ring suburb of Detroit, Michigan, United States.Opened in 1957, the mall expanded several times before finally closing in 2021.
Long-struggling Eastland Center mall was essentially a dead mall by summer 2021 and down to just a handful of stores when NorthPoint bought the entire 83-acre property later that year from the ...
That year, the Hudson's department store chain and architect Victor Gruen developed Northland Center in the Detroit suburb of Southfield. [1] It was followed by three other directional malls in Detroit suburbs, also developed by Hudson's and Gruen: Eastland Center in Harper Woods, Westland Center in Westland and Southland Center in Taylor.
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.
The developer of Northland City Center plans to soon open 2 new 100-unit apartment buildings at the site, 1 of 3 old mall sites being redeveloped. Old Hudson's building is all that says 1970s ...
Harper Woods is located between the City of Detroit, Eastpointe, St. Clair Shores, [23] and Grosse Pointe Woods. Harper Woods borders Macomb County along 8 Mile Road on its north side. It is located along I-94. Eastland Center was the community's shopping center until it closed in 2021. [24] Harper Woods has no rail access. [25]
The project also officially got a new name: Eastland Yards. For years, the city-owned land has sat vacant, a vast parking lot cleared of buildings. A skate park was built on the site and vendors ...
The J. L. Hudson Company (commonly known simply as Hudson's) was an upscale retail department store chain based in Detroit, Michigan.Hudson's flagship store, on Woodward Avenue in Downtown Detroit (demolished October 24, 1998), [1] was the tallest department store in the world in 1961, [2] and, at one time, claimed to be the second-largest department store, after Macy's, in the United States ...