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The Tacoma Mall is the largest shopping center in Tacoma, Washington, United States, and is owned and operated by the Simon Property Group.Anchor tenants include Dick's Sporting Goods, JCPenney (originally two levels, but added a third level in 1986), Macy's (originally The Bon Marché), and Nordstrom, with one vacant and demolished anchor last occupied by Sears, which opened in 1981.
Auburn Mall [10] Burlington Mall [10] Cape Cod Mall [10] Copley Place [10] Lee Premium Outlets; Liberty Tree Mall [10] Liberty Tree Strip; Northshore Mall [10] The Offices at Copley Place; Reliant Medical Group - Auburn Office; The Shops at Chestnut Hill [10] South Shore Plaza [10] Square One Mall [10] Wrentham Village Premium Outlets
Recent permit filings with the city of Tacoma show more changes are coming to the Tacoma Mall, including one familiar salon’s exit. First, the loss: Gene Juarez Salon and Spa is relocating to a ...
The Village, another multimillion-dollar project, is already in the works on site, and is slated to open late next year. The two-building addition in a 26,000-square-foot area on site will be home ...
Tacoma Mall – Tacoma (1965–present) Totem Lake Mall – Kirkland (1973–2016) Three Rivers Mall – Kelso (1987–present) Valley Mall – Yakima (1972–present) Vancouver Mall – Vancouver (1977–present) Wenatchee Valley Mall – Wenatchee (1978–present) Westfield Southcenter – Tukwila (1968–present)
Plans remain in the works to demolish an existing office building near the mall to create Avanti Apartments, 4218 S. Steele St., which is set to include ground-floor businesses as live/work spaces ...
Six restaurants now listed as future tenants of the two new buildings planned in redevelopment project.
The concrete terrazzo floors of the mall, which were a last-minute addition, were said to be the largest in area (85,000 square feet) in the entire Puget Sound region. 500 cubic yards of sand, 3,000 100-pound sacks of gray cement, 3,000 100-pound (45 kg) sacks of white cement and 5,000 100-pound (45 kg) sacks of brown marble chips were required ...