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The Des Plaines Mall was a 185,000 square foot (17,200 m 2) [1] [a] shopping mall in downtown Des Plaines, Illinois. It was designed by J.R. Gottlieb & Co. It was designed by J.R. Gottlieb & Co. The architect was Erickson and Stevens, Inc. [ 2 ] Construction began June 1, 1976. [ 3 ]
The "lavishly appointed" mall opened on March 10, 1977 with 620,000 sq ft (58,000 m 2) of retail space, which included a 237,000 sq ft (22,000 m 2) Bloomingdale's (expanded from an original freestanding site opened in 1959) and a 107,000 sq ft (9,900 m 2) Saks Fifth Avenue. [3] Until 2005, the shopping center was known as Riverside Square Mall.
Riverside Mall may refer to these shopping malls: Main Street Pedestrian Mall (Riverside, California) Riverside Mall (Mbombela), in Mpumalanga, South Africa; Riverside Mall (Rondebosch), in Cape Metropole, South Africa; Riverside Mall (Utica, New York), formerly operated by The Pyramid Companies
According to the 2021 census gazetteer files, Des Plaines has a total area of 14.38 square miles (37.24 km 2), of which 14.24 square miles (36.88 km 2) (or 98.98%) is land and 0.15 square miles (0.39 km 2) (or 1.02%) is water. [16] Des Plaines is traversed by two interstate highways – I-90 (the Northwest Tollway) and I-294 (the Tri-State ...
The Riverside district includes the streets, parkways, parklands, and historic gas street lighting in the area bounded by 26th St., Harlem and Ogden Aves., the Des Plaines River, and Forbes Rd. [3] Also included are the many homes and estates designed by architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright, Daniel Burnham, Louis Sullivan, William Le Baron ...
Riverside is a suburban village in Cook County, Illinois, United States.The population of the village was 9,298 at the 2020 census. [4] It is a suburb of Chicago, located roughly 9 miles (14 km) west of downtown Chicago and 2 miles (3 km) outside city limits.
In 2008, the Illinois Gaming Board awarded the state's 10th and last casino license to Midwest Gaming and Entertainment LLC, a group led by Neil Bluhm, [1] to build a 140,000-square-foot (13,000 m 2) casino on approximately 21 acres (8.5 ha) adjacent to the Tri-State Tollway at the northwest corner of Devon Avenue and Des Plaines River Road ...
As such, the Des Plaines Oasis was closed on March 16, 2014; this allowed vendor contents to be removed and demolition to proceed. [11] The Tollway announced plans to widen the Tri-State Tollway, which resulted in the demolitions of the pavilions of the O'Hare Oasis in 2018 and the Hinsdale Oasis in 2021. [12] [13]