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The Landmark Center or 401 Park Building in Boston, Massachusetts is a commercial center situated in a limestone and brick art deco building built in 1928 for Sears, Roebuck and Company. It features a 200-foot-tall (61 m) tower and, as Sears Roebuck and Company Mail Order Store , it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and ...
The mall was expanded substantially in the 1980s, adding a long wing created from the closed R. H. White building which led to a new JCPenney store. In 1992, Sage-Allen closed their store at the mall and was replaced by a Service Merchandise store. In 1999, Service Merchandise closed their store and the long side wing leading to it was emptied out.
Brookline Avenue is a principal urban artery in the city of Boston, Massachusetts. It runs from Kenmore Square in the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood, forming a 1.5-mile straight line to its other terminus at Washington Street in the Brookline Village neighborhood of Brookline, Massachusetts . [ 1 ]
Landmark Center (Boston), a former Sears warehouse; Landmark Center (St. Paul), in St. Paul, Minnesota This page was last edited on 20 November 2013, at 19:59 (UTC). ...
Boot Barn is one of the stores coming to the Consumer Centre on ... a landmark center on Route 36 at the edge of West Long Branch, in late 2022. Its largest tenants include Home Depot, PetSmart ...
The original anchor store was local department store Gilchrist's, [1] which was expanded in 1984-85 and substantially renovated between 2000 and 2003. The Gilchrist's store was then replaced by Jordan Marsh in 1977 (became the first Macy's in 1996) while Sears was later added to the mall in 1999. Toys R Us was added next to Macy’s in the 80s ...
The Boston Public Market [2] is an indoor public market that opened in July 2015 [3] in downtown Boston, adjacent to the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway. The market houses more than 28 year-round vendor stalls, and is open seven days a week. [ 4 ]
The market is a designated National Historic Landmark and a designated Boston Landmark in 1996, significant as one of the largest market complexes built in the United States in the first half of the 19th century. According to the National Park Service, some of Boston's early slave auctions took place near what is now Quincy Market. [2]