Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The structure was designed by Santa Fe architect William Lumpkins. [4] In 1975, luxury men's department store Goodman's relocated from the Santa Fe Plaza. [5] In 1977, the center added a Montgomery Ward and JCPenney as anchors and a United Artist two-screen theater.
Albuquerque/Santa Fe: Santa Fe: 9 8 KNMD-TV: PBS/World: Create on 9.2 Albuquerque/Santa Fe: Santa Fe: 11 10 KCHF: Rel. Antenna TV on 11.2, QVC on 11.3, QVC2 on 11.4, KDAZ-AM on 11.5 Albuquerque/Santa Fe: Albuquerque: 13 13 KRQE: CBS: Fox on 13.2, Bounce TV on 13.3 Albuquerque/Santa Fe: Albuquerque: 14 22 KLUZ-TV: UNI: Quest on 14.2, HSN on 14.3 ...
JCPenney moved from Santa Fe's first mall, De Vargas Center, Sears moved from its Downtown location. In 2011, United Artists North, then known as the only "discount theater" in Santa Fe, closed. [14] In 2016, Cost Plus World Market and Bed Bath & Beyond opened stores there. [15] Sports Authority closed in 2016 due to bankruptcy. Conn's HomePlus ...
Macy's got its start as America's first department store before the Civil War, and with all the ups and downs of the last 160+ years, the brand still lives on today.
Buddy the Elf was supposed to work at Macy's, but the store was changed last minute. Here's why.
The Santa Fe Factory Outlets was curated by California-based developer Steve Craig of Ginsburg Craig and Associates in 1990. [1] [2] At the time, the shopping center was one of two outlet malls simultaneously being developed within the state. The New Mexico Outlet Center also opened a complex in Budaghers, New Mexico in 1993. [3]
Jun. 19—The property that houses nearly quarter-century-old Maria's New Mexican Kitchen, a Santa Fe institution known for its local cuisine and vast selection of margaritas, was listed Tuesday ...
SpiegelbergBros. The Spiegelberg Brothers or the House of Spiegelberg Brothers, Santa Fe Traders was founded by Soloman Jacob Spiegelberg and Levi Spiegelberg in 1848. It was a thriving wholesale merchant partnership which included a grocery and dry goods store across from the Governor's Palace [1] [2] It was the first Jewish mercantile company in Santa Fe.