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The mall's movie theater complex closed for good in September 2005. [47] [48] Toys "R" Us left the mall in early 2006. [49] The Tilt! arcade closed in the summer of 2007, moving most of their arcades to other stores, namely their newest location in St. Louis Mills, despite being rated as one of the top 3 arcades in the St Louis area in 2003.
[2] [3] The $1.5 million center would include a 16,400-square-foot Food Fair grocery store, part of a chain owned by Messick. It was also have a 14,000-square-foot F.W. Woolworth , a 9000-square-foot Eckerd Drug , a laundromat , a bakery, a toy store, a children's store, a barber , a beauty salon , a gift shop, a shoe store, a ladies' wear ...
F. W. Woolworth Building (Calumet, Michigan) Calumet, Michigan: 1948 A contributing building in the Calumet Historic District within the Keweenaw National Historical Park. Now the Keweenaw Storytelling Center F. W. Woolworth Building (Clarksdale, Mississippi) Clarksdale, Mississippi
Michigan Big Lots stores in Benton Harbor, Livonia, Saginaw and Taylor will be closing.
Chesterfield Mall was a shopping mall in Chesterfield, Missouri, at the intersection of Interstate 64/U.S. Routes 40-61 and Clarkson Road . [2] The mall opened in 1976, [3] built by Richard Jacobs. [4] [5] With the closing of Northwest Plaza in St. Ann in 2010, Chesterfield Mall became the largest shopping mall in the St. Louis metropolitan area.
The Famous-Barr Co. (originally Famous and Barr Co.) was a division of Macy's, Inc. (formerly Federated Department Stores). Headquartered in St. Louis, Missouri, in the Railway Exchange Building, it was the flagship store of The May Department Stores Company, which was acquired by Federated on August 30, 2005.
The flagship store in downtown St. Louis, designed by John Mauran and built in stages between 1906 and 1991, was briefly closed and reopened in 1985 as part of the St. Louis Centre Mall, but would be shuttered in September 2001, amidst the mall's failure. The River Roads store was demolished along with the rest of shopping center. The store at ...
May Centers, a subsidiary of The May Department Stores Company, which then owned the St. Louis, Missouri-based department store Famous-Barr, announced plans to build Northland Shopping Center in 1954. Under these plans, a four-story 325,000-square-foot (30,200 m 2) Famous-Farr store would be the central anchor store.