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Anderson Towne Center is a shopping mall in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.Built in 1969 as Beechmont Mall, it originally included John Shillito Company (Shillito's) and Mabley & Carew as its major anchor stores, with Gold Circle joining in 1980.
A remodeling in 2007 consisted of the razing of the former Pogue's/Parisian anchor (on the mall's southwest end). The store was replaced by a 2-level (140,000 square foot) Nordstrom department store that opened on September 25, 2009. [2] An extension of the mall concourse designed by FRCH was created to access the new anchor.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. Downtown Cincinnati is defined as being all of the city south of Central Parkway, west of Interstates 71 and 471, and east of Interstate 75. The locations of National Register properties ...
The total office vacancy rate for downtown Cincinnati was 16.8% in the first quarter this year, up from 16.6% in the previous quarter, according to the latest Cincinnati office market report from ...
One of Downtown's most ornate structures will soon become an extended-stay hotel with 2,000 square-feet of street-level commercial space. On Wednesday, Cincinnati City Council approved a ...
Retail developer Jonathan Woodner first announced plans for Swifton Center in 1951, and sold his stake in the mall to Stahl Development in 1954. [2] The site chosen for the center was the southeast corner of Reading Road (U.S. Route 42) and Seymour Avenue within the city limits of Cincinnati, Ohio, a site determined by market analysts to be the center of population for the Cincinnati market at ...
Gourmet Room and the Miró mural. The Gourmet Room or Gourmet Restaurant (1948–1992) was a fine-dining restaurant and iconic modernist space in Cincinnati, Ohio, which received five-star Mobil ratings in the 1970s and was at the time one of the few restaurants in the country so rated. [1]
FOREST PARK – A local developer wants to buy the beleaguered Cincinnati Mall, formerly Forest Fair Mall, and turn it into an industrial park that could include a 120,000-square-foot major food ...