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The original Natick Mall was developed by businessmen William Lane, Stephen Mugar, and John Brennan. Construction began in 1965, connecting two stand-alone locations of Sears and Filene's (which had opened in March and August 1965, respectively), with a 600,000-square-foot (56,000-square-meter), single-level shopping venue with 30 in-line stores.
Shopping centres with anchor stores have consistently outperformed those without one, as the anchor helps draw shoppers initially attracted to the anchor to shop at other shops in the mall. [5] Thus, a mall which loses its last anchor is often considered to be a dead mall.
Warwick Mall LLC 15 Natick Mall: Natick, Massachusetts: Massachusetts: 1,695,884 [7] 214 Nordstrom, Macy's, Dave & Buster's, Level 99, Shopper's Find (temporary anchor) 1966 Brookfield Properties Retail Group 16 Holyoke Mall at Ingleside: Holyoke, Massachusetts: Massachusetts 1,600,000 [8] 151
In Florida, a handful of dead mall anchor Sears stores, left vacant and unmoored by the iconic retailer’s bankruptcy six years ago, are being jolted back to life. It’s all fun and games now at ...
The Natick location will join a crowded grocery store market in MetroWest, even after the recent closure of Wegmans in the Natick Mall during the summer. Nearby are an Aldi, Whole Foods Market ...
NATICK — Developers working on a pickleball facility set to go into the Natick Mall expect it to open later this month, with four restaurants and two exclusive partnerships under its roof.
Therefore, a correct overall GLA would need to take into account ALL the areas (internal mall + anchor store space) which, many times, is the larger number you'll see referenced in news articles and other publications. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.221.146.235 06:12, 14 June 2009 (UTC)
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