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Shopping malls in Ohio by county (4 C) Pages in category "Shopping malls in Ohio" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_shopping_malls_in_Ohio&oldid=698500709"
The Mall at Fairfield Commons, often referred to as the Fairfield Mall, is a shopping mall in Beavercreek, Ohio, United States, a suburb of Dayton. The mall was opened in 1993 and has two floors. The anchor stores are Macy's, J. C. Penney, Dick's Sporting Goods, Round 1 Entertainment, and Morris Home Furniture. [1]
General Growth Properties first conceived the idea of a mall in Maumee, Ohio in the mid-1990s. Initially, the mall was to have been an enclosed project, but in 2003, the company decided on building a lifestyle center. [2] Stores that were proposed to open at the mall included Sears, Galyan's, Kaufmann's and Parisian. [3]
The Mall at Tuttle Crossing is an enclosed shopping mall located in northwest Columbus, Ohio. It has a Dublin, Ohio mailing address, [2] but it is in the Columbus city limits. [3] It was developed by a joint venture of Taubman Centers and the Georgetown Company and opened July 24, 1997. In 2021, the mall was reported to be heading towards ...
Severance Center, also known as Severance Town Center, is a shopping center located in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, an inner ring Greater Cleveland suburb roughly 7 miles (11 km) from downtown Cleveland. It is anchored by The Home Depot , Dave's Markets , Marshall's , and OfficeMax , and four vacant anchors that were formerly Walmart , Borders ...
The other area locations the company intends to shutter are the locations at Liberty Center, Dayton Mall, and their outlet location at the Tanger Outlets in Jeffersonville, Ohio. During the 2019 holiday season, the mall implemented a youth escort policy/curfew in response to a fight in one of the mall's stores.
The first phase of the mall, featuring Bigg's and approximately 20 other stores, opened on July 11, 1988. A month prior to this, Higbee's withdrew from the project after being purchased by a joint venture of Dillard's and Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. [10] As a result, B. Altman was relocated from its originally planned store to the space vacated by Higbee's, thus leaving a vacant anchor store and ...