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Gross Leasable Area sq ft / m 2 Number of Stores Beaver Valley Mall: Monaca: 1,153,000 sq ft (107,100 m 2) 70 Berkshire Mall: Wyomissing: 910,000 sq ft (84,500 m 2) 69 Capital City Mall: Camp Hill: 608,911 sq ft (56,600 m 2) 90 Carbon Plaza Mall: Lehighton: 210,000 sq ft (19,500 m 2) 20 Church Hill Mall Hazleton: 150,000 sq ft (13,900 m 2) [1] 15
May promptly sold The Joseph Horne Company to a group of local investors. In 1995, Federated Department Stores acquired Horne's and renamed all former locations under its own Lazarus regional nameplate. In 1998, after operating a few years as Lazarus, Federated closed several locations including the Beaver Valley Mall store.
Great Mall of the Bay Area [10] Las Americas Premium Outlets; Napa Premium Outlets; Ontario Mills [10] The Outlets at Orange [10] Petaluma Village Premium Outlets; Pismo Beach Premium Outlets; San Francisco Premium Outlets; Santa Rosa Plaza [10] The Shops at Mission Viejo [10] Stanford Shopping Center [10] Stoneridge Shopping Center [10 ...
In 1983, the mall opened with The Denver Dry Goods Company and anchor stores May-Daniels & Fisher (May D&F), Montgomery Ward, Sears, and Joslins.. In 1987, The May Department Stores Company, then owners of May D&F, acquired The Denver Dry Goods Company; since May Company already operated a May D&F store at the mall, the Denver Dry Goods store was sold to J. C. Penney.
This is a list of department stores of the United States currently operating. This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (October 2023)
This page was last edited on 3 December 2024, at 06:56 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
A number of hotels are adjacent to the center. [8] In late August 2010, the center was acquired by Simon Property Group's Premium Outlet sector along with the majority of the Prime Outlet centers. It was then renamed Grove City Premium Outlets in September 2010. [9]
Joslin's Dry Goods later evolved into a department store and was purchased by Mercantile Stores, a Fairfield, Ohio-based department store conglomerate. [3] The building was designed by Denver architect Frank E. Edbrooke and renovated in 1902, 1927, and 1964. The company rebranded as Joslins following the 1964 remodel, which also significantly ...