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Shopping malls in Kitchener, Ontario (2 P) Pages in category "Shopping malls in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
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
The market was established in April 1975 by eight farmers, [6] who merged a three-owner stockyard based in Waterloo with a five-owner stockyard based in Kitchener. [3] The owners included Jim Wideman, Bruce Hertel [ 3 ] Jacob Shantz, Ross Shantz, and Milo Shantz; the Shantz families then managed the facility for over forty years.
Waterloo is an unincorporated community in southeastern Symmes Township, Lawrence County, Ohio, United States, [1] along Symmes Creek. [2] It has a post office with the ZIP code 45688. [ 3 ] Waterloo, Ohio is also noteworthy for having produced the Waterloo Wonders , who carried Ohio's Class B championship in basketball for both 1934 and 1935.
Built between 1971 and 1973 on the grounds of the original Kitchener City Hall in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. It was home to an Eaton's (opened in 1973 and later became a Sears Canada retail store [1]), and home to the Kitchener Farmer's Market from 1973 to 2004. Eaton's closed on June 30, 1997, one of the company's first locations to shut down ...
Town and Country Shopping Center has 74 spaces for shops and restaurants and is anchored by Stein Mart (34,000 sq ft; 3,200 m 2); 2nd and Charles (22,246 sq ft; 2,066.7 m 2); TJ Maxx (22,100 sq ft; 2,050 m 2); Tuesday Morning (13,936 sq ft; 1,294.7 m 2); Petco (13,700 sq ft; 1,270 m 2); Trader Joe's (12,223 sq ft; 1,135.6 m 2); Roderer Shoe Center, the largest shoe store in Ohio (11,036 sq ft ...
The mall opened in 1969 in the Mansfield suburb of Ontario near US 30. It occupied a 64-acre site, with Lazarus, Sears, and O'Neil's (later May Company Ohio, then Kaufmann's) as its anchor stores. Jacobs Visconsi Jacobs developed the property, and first announced it in 1966. [2] The Lazarus store was their first location outside the Columbus ...
The term market comes from the Latin mercatus ("market place"). The earliest recorded use of the term market in English is in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of 963, a work that was created during the reign of Alfred the Great (r. 871–899) and subsequently distributed, copied throughout English monasteries.