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Park Forest is a village located south of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States, with a small southern portion in Will County.The village was originally designed by Loebl Schlossman & Bennett as a planned community for veterans returning from World War II. [2]
Park Forest Village is located in southern Centre County at (40.801060, -77.909423 The eastern end of the community touches the northwestern corner of the borough of State College . The northern edge of the community is defined by U.S. Route 322 Business (North Atherton Street).
The site of Lincolnwood Town Center was formerly occupied by the headquarters of Bell & Howell.Developers Melvin Simon & Associates (now known as Simon Property Group and Chicago-based Hawthorn Realty first proposed to build a 1.2-million-square-foot (110,000 m 2) mall on the site in 1985, but the plan was turned down by city trustees.
It opened in 1966 and was a development of KLC Ventures, a firm that included the pioneering developer Philip M. Klutznick and his son Tom. The elder Klutznick had developed Park Forest, Illinois, after World War II, as well as Oakbrook Center in Oak Brook in 1962 and Old Orchard Shopping Center in Skokie in 1956.
Park Forest Plaza was a shopping center located in the planned community of Park Forest, Illinois, United States, that opened in 1949.The center was developed by Philip M. Klutznick, (1907-1999), who was also a prominent leader in the national Jewish community and later served as U.S. Secretary of Commerce under 39th President Jimmy Carter.
The mall opened 1979 as Forest Village Park Mall, anchored by JCPenney and Kmart and developed by Melvin Simon & Associates. [2] The Kmart store closed in 2002. [3] In 2003, Petrie Ross Ventures purchased the mall from Simon Property Group for $20.3 million. [4]
Scott Place Mounds is an archaeological site in Union Parish, Louisiana from the Late Coles Creek-Early Plaquemine period, dating to approximately 1200 CE. The site is one of the few such sites in north-central Louisiana .
On March 4, 2018, Carson Pirie Scott abruptly closed its Lincoln Mall store, leaving JCPenney the only remaining tenant. [13] In November 2019, demolition of the former Carson's building commenced. [14] On January 30, 2020, The City of Matteson approved a casino on the mall site, proposed by South Suburban Development LLC. [15]