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The Shops at North Bridge, once known as Westfield North Bridge, is an upscale, urban retail-entertainment district in Chicago, Illinois, located at 520 N. Michigan Avenue. Its anchor store is Nordstrom. Its name alludes first to its location within the nine-block North Bridge complex and to the literal distinction of the shopping center ...
Fayette Mall was opened by developer Richard E. Jacobs Group Inc. on April 20, 1971, supplanting Turfland Mall as Lexington's largest shopping mall. [2] Its original anchor stores included Sears, Shillito's (became Shillito-Rike's in 1982, Lazarus in 1986, Lazarus-Macy's in 2003, now Macy's since 2005) and Stewart Dry Goods (became L. S. Ayres in 1985, Ben Snyder's in 1987, Hess's in 1988, now ...
Oxmoor Center is a shopping mall in Louisville, Kentucky. Opening in 1971, its anchor stores are Macy's, Von Maur, H&M, the Apple Store and Dick's Sporting Goods, along with a Topgolf location. The mall is owned by Brookfield Properties and features approximately 960,000 square feet (89,000 m 2) of retail space.
3TEN: Lexington chef Jonathan Lundy and sommelier TJ Cox, the team behind ItalX and Corto Lima, are opening an upscale cocktail bar called 3TEN at 310 W. Short St. this fall in the former location ...
The chain serves delicious food at hard-to-beat prices, and there's something about eating it a mall food court that makes it all the more crave-worthy. Kaitlin S./Yelp 5.
McAlpin’s opened in 1967 at Turfland Mall, and two other locations followed on Richmond Road and Fayette Mall. The store closed their location in 1998 after it was bought out by Dillard’s.
Pages in category "Shopping malls in Kentucky" ... The Mall at Lexington Green; Mall St. Matthews; Mid-City Mall; Middlesboro Mall; N. Newport on the Levee; O.
The mall was at 100% capacity and many stores were leading the nation in sales. The Karmelkorn Shoppe became the number one sales-leader in the nation for the month of December 1988 selling 16,250 pounds, or roughly eight tons, of popcorn; [4] it was expected that it would be the number one chain again in December 1989 since same-store revenues had increased 30%.