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In 2015, Jack White of the band The White Stripes, opened a retail store for his record label, Third Man Records at the corner of Canfield and Cass. [10] From 2009, Dr. Alesia Montgomery of Michigan State University conducted a five-year study visualizing a reinvented Detroit as a green city, with a particular emphasis on the Cass Corridor. [11 ...
Invisible Stripes is a 1939 Warner Bros. crime film starring George Raft as a gangster unable to go straight after returning home from prison. The movie was directed by Lloyd Bacon and also features William Holden , Jane Bryan and Humphrey Bogart .
After initial delays that saw the cancellation of two proposed anchor stores (a Jillian's and a movie theater), [1] construction began on Fountain Walk in late 2001. The mall's owner, PLC Novi West, initially worked with Taubman Centers and Ramco-Gershenson, two Detroit-area based developers; Schostak Corporation was later hired as a leasing agent.
The exterior of the Metropolitan Building in downtown Detroit, where The Somerset Collection will open a pop-up store called the Luxury Locker Room on April 17, 2024, in time for the NFL draft.
Laurel Park Place is an enclosed shopping mall located in the city of Livonia, a suburb of Detroit, Michigan, United States.The mall, which is managed by CBL & Associates Properties, features approximately 30 stores and three restaurants.
The mall features a 14-screen MJR movie theater; a snow-melt system on the sidewalks; an outdoor play area. The mall (and most of the stores) is billed as dog friendly, and the mall itself maintains a dog/owner code of conduct and a list of dog friendly stores. [17] It joins at least 38 other pet friendly malls in the United States. [18]
The Savage X Fenty store, located at 1442 Woodward Ave., was more than two years in the making, with the brand first announcing it would open a brick-and-mortar store in Detroit in May 2022. This ...
The shopping center would have been Michigan's first shopping center constructed on 8 Mile and Kelly Road but the idea was scrapped. The mall was developed in 1957 by Hudson's, a Detroit-based department store chain (and corporate predecessor of Target Corp) that also developed Northland Center, another Detroit area mall.