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A strip mall, strip center, strip plaza or simply plaza is a type of shopping center common in North America and Australia where the stores are arranged in a row, with a footpath in front. Strip malls are typically developed as a unit and have large parking lots in front.
Aerial view of the Financial District in Downtown Toronto Main Street in Chesterton, Indiana. Commercial areas, commercial districts or commercial zones in a city are areas, districts, or neighborhoods primarily composed of commercial buildings, such as a strip mall, office parks, downtown, central business district, financial district, "Main Street", or shopping centers.
A pad site or outparcel is a freestanding parcel of commercial real estate located in the front of a larger shopping center or strip mall. [1] Desirable because of their visibility to consumers, accessibility, and the ease of facilitating drive-thru service, pad sites are typically sought after by banks, casual dining, and fast food restaurants.
Valley Stream-- Green Acres Mall, Rockaway Avenue, Merrick Road, Central Avenue; Port Washington-- Main Street; Great Neck-- Middle Neck Road, Great Neck Plaza, North Shore Shopping Mart [27] Westbury-- Post Avenue, The Mall at the Source, The Galley at Westbury Plaza; Huntington-- New York Avenue, NY Route 110, Walt Whitman Mall
Strip malls: Open-air centers under 30,000 square feet (2,800 m 2) are generally considered strip malls. [12] Kingsway West Retail Park in Dundee, Scotland – a ...
Long-suffering retail—strip malls, shopping centers, dead malls and their cousins—could be converted into hundreds of thousands of new apartments nationwide, with just a bit of work.
The term "mall" is used for those types of centers in some markets beyond North America such as India [42] and the United Arab Emirates. [43] In other developing countries such as Namibia and Zambia, "Mall" is found in the names of many small centers that qualify as neighborhood shopping centers or strip malls according to the ICSC. [44]
Common areas often exist in apartments, gated communities, condominiums, cooperatives, and shopping malls. [6] In any situation where there is a tenancy in common, all the tenants in common collectively own the common areas, meaning that any one individual owner does not possess more control over the land than any other owner. [7]