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Stamford Town Center is an urban shopping mall located in Downtown Stamford, Connecticut. The 761,000-square-foot (70,700 m 2 ) mall is the eighth largest in Connecticut, with space for about 130 stores and restaurants.
Stamford is a city on the border of Jones and Haskell counties in west-central Texas, United States.The population was 2,907 at the 2020 census. [3] Henry McHarg, president of the Texas Central Railroad, named the site in 1900 for his hometown of Stamford, Connecticut. [4]
Downtown Stamford, or Stamford Downtown, is the central business district of the city of Stamford, Connecticut, United States.It includes major retail establishments, a shopping mall, a university campus, the headquarters of major corporations and Fortune 500 companies, as well as other retail businesses, hotels, restaurants, offices, entertainment venues and high-rise apartment buildings.
The Mall at University Town Center. Replaced 1996 Sarasota "Resort Store". Oct 15, 2012 [144] open 8356 Toronto, ON Canada: Downtown: Toronto 176 Yonge Street in part of the Hudson's Bay Queen Street building. 150,000 sq ft (14,000 m 2) 2015 [145] open San Juan, Puerto Rico: San Juan Mall of San Juan. Destroyed by hurricane and not reopened ...
Short Pump Town Center – Richmond (2003–present, outdoor) Skyline Mall – Bailey's Crossroads (1977–2002) Southpark Mall – Colonial Heights (1989–present) Spotsylvania Towne Centre – Spotsylvania County (1980–present) Springfield Town Center – Springfield (1973–present) Staunton Mall – Staunton (1987–2020)
2009 Map of the Dallas Pedestrian Network. The Dallas Pedestrian Network or Dallas Pedway is a system of grade-separated walkways covering thirty-six city blocks of Downtown Dallas, Texas, United States. [1] The system connects buildings, garages and parks through tunnels and above-ground skybridges.
Inner zone trains usually originate here and run local all the way to Grand Central. Passengers transferring between zones can make cross-platform interchanges in Stamford. In the 2000s, Stamford and Greenwich received increasing numbers of reverse commuters who work in Stamford but live in New York City. Reverse commuting doubled from 1997 to ...
An earlier Stamford Town Hall had been constructed in 1871 and destroyed in a fire in 1904. [8] To replace it, the City of Stamford (which then had about 19,000 inhabitants) commissioned a new town hall, designed by architects Edgar Josselyn and Nathan Mellen. [8] Designed in 1905, [2] the building opened in 1906. [3]