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Bowie Town Center is an outdoor shopping mall located in Bowie, Maryland that opened in November 2001. [3] The mall is located on Emerald Way near the interchange of US Route 301 and US Route 50 . Bowie Town Center has 79 stores including Macy's , Safeway , and LA Fitness .
Bowie (/ ˈ b uː i /) is a city in Prince George's County, Maryland, United States. [3] Per the 2020 census, the population was 58,329. [4] Bowie has grown from a small railroad stop to the largest municipality in Prince George's County, and the fifth most populous city [5] and third largest city by area in the U.S. state of Maryland.
Rouse proposed the idea of a shopping center and the estate was demolished for development in 1955. [2] Mondawmin Center was built as an urban retail hub. It was an open-air complex of 58 store spaces, featuring a spiral staircase, a three-level Sears, a G.C. Murphy 5 and 10, and Food Fair and Penn Fruit supermarkets.
The mall opened in 1979 as the Kenilworth Bazaar. [1] The original anchor stores were Stebbins Anderson and Hochschild Kohn's.. In 2008, the mall started to undergo a multimillion-dollar facelift. [2]
The divided highway south of Bowie State University was under construction in 1989 and completed by 1991. [18] [19] In 1991, the divided highway was connected with Laurel Bowie Road north of Old Town Bowie; MD 197 was assigned to the new highway and removed from Old Town Bowie; MD 564 was extended east to its present terminus along old MD 197. [19]
The Central Avenue Line, designated Route C21, C22, C26, C27, C29, is a daily bus route operated by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority between Addison Road-Seat Pleasant station (C21, C22, C27, C29) or Downtown Largo station (C26) of the Blue and Silver lines of the Washington Metro, and Bowie Park & Ride Lot (C26), Pointer Ridge (C27, C29 Sunday trips), Collington Center (C21 ...
Levitt used the building and the stables as corporate offices as they developed their suburban housing development, "Belair at Bowie." In 1964, Levitt sold the mansion and 5.5894 acres (22,619 m 2) of land including the Ogle cemetery to the City of Bowie for the price of $1 to be used as City Hall [27] as well as what is now Foxhill Park. [28]
The Bowie Railroad Buildings comprise three small frame structures at the former Bowie train station, located at the junction of what is now the Northeast Corridor and the Pope's Creek Subdivision in the town center of Bowie, Maryland. The complex includes a single-story freight depot, a two-story interlocking tower, and an open passenger shed. [4]