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Sundance Square is the name of a 35-block commercial, residential, entertainment and retail district in downtown Fort Worth, Texas. Named after the Sundance Kid in western folklore, it is a popular place for nightlife and entertainment in Fort Worth and for tourists visiting the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex .
The F.W. Woolworth Building is a historic department store building located in Sundance Square section of downtown Fort Worth, Texas. The building served as a retail location for the F. W. Woolworth Company from 1926 to 1990. It now houses other tenants including a JoS. A. Bank Clothiers store.
The company razed the complex and had a 900,000 square feet (84,000 m 2) corporate headquarters campus built after the City of Fort Worth approved a 30-year economic agreement to ensure that the company stayed in Fort Worth. The company sold the building and, as of 2009, had two years left of a rent-free lease in the building.
That same study found 7.3 million people visited the Fort Worth Stockyards in 2022. Fort Worth as a whole saw 10.8 million visitors in 2022, and 11.4 million visitors in 2023, according to ...
Whitacre Tower - AT&T's corporate headquarters in Dallas Headquarters of AMR Corporation, American Airlines, and American Eagle in Fort Worth Southwest Airlines headquarters in Dallas Comerica Bank Tower. The following are the Fortune 500 companies headquartered in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex: [2] 9 McKesson ; 13 AT&T
The history of shopping malls in Texas began with the oldest shopping center in the United States, Highland Park Village, which opened in 1931 in the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex. [1] The latter and Greater Houston area are both home to numerous regional shopping malls and shopping centers located in various areas of the city.
Pages in category "Shopping malls in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
When North East Mall held its official re-dedication on September 15, 2001, the center encompassed 1,749,000 leasable square feet and 168 stores and services. It was then the second-largest enclosed shopping mall in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex and the second-largest in Texas, following The Galleria in Houston.