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Westfield Montgomery - Bethesda; Westfield Wheaton - Wheaton; Prince George's County: Beltway Plaza Mall - Greenbelt; Bowie Town Center - Bowie; The Centre at Forestville - Forestville; The Shops at Iverson - Hillcrest Heights; The Mall at Prince Georges - Hyattsville; Queen Anne's County: Queenstown Premium Outlets; Washington County ...
When it filed for bankruptcy in September, Big Lots was the fourth-largest home goods retailer in the U.S. Big Lots had 1,392 stores at the beginning of 2024 and now has 872 stores across the U.S ...
The mall was named in honor of Lake Walker, a man-made lake and park on the property prior. The mall opened with approximately 30-50 stores, [12] with some of the first stores being relocated from the then nearby indoor Village Mall (now an outdoor strip mall called Montgomery Village Center since circa 1991) and absorbed onto the property. [13]
A mid-1970s expansion added a US$4.5 million, 155,000-square-foot (14,400 m 2) Woodward & Lothrop store and 60,000 square feet (5,600 m 2) of additional retail space for 40 stores. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] On March 1. 1976, longtime fugitive William Bradford Bishop bought a ball peen hammer and gas can at the mall to allegedly kill and burn his family.
White Flint Mall was a shopping mall, located along Rockville Pike, in Montgomery County, Maryland, that closed in early 2015 and demolished thereafter.Its former anchors were Lord & Taylor, Bloomingdale's, Dave & Buster's, H&M, Loews Theatre and Borders, the last four of which acted as junior anchors for the mall.
A&P. Perhaps one of the best-known defunct grocery store chains, A&P, or the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, traces its roots back to 1859, beginning as a mail-order tea business in New York ...
“We treated it like we were inviting people into our home,” Bill Barstow, who owns theaters with his wife, Colleen, told Yahoo Entertainment. “If they're coming into your home, everything ...
Fraser opened the Fraser Gallery in 1996 in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington. [2] In 2002 she opened a second gallery in Bethesda, [3] [4] a Maryland suburb of the Greater Washington area. She also founded Secondsight, [5] [6] [7] an organization of women photographers. The galleries closed in 2011. [8]