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Shopping malls in Richmond, Virginia (7 P) Pages in category "Shopping malls in Virginia" The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total.
Dulles Town Center is a two-level enclosed shopping mall in Sterling in Loudoun County, Virginia.It is located five miles (8.0 km) north of Washington Dulles International Airport.
This is a list of shopping malls in the United States and its territories that have at least 2,000,000 total square feet (190,000 m 2) of retail space (gross leasable area). The list is based on the latest self-reported figures from the mall management websites, which are also reported on each mall's individual wiki page.
The mall has over 225 retailers and an 18-screen AMC movie theater organized into five "neighborhoods." [3] Major tenants include Nordstrom Rack, Costco, Burlington, Marshalls & HomeGoods, JCPenney, American Freight, TJ Maxx, Bloomingdales Outlet, AMC Potomac Mills 18, The Children's Place, Nike Factory Outlet, Forever 21, Camille La Vie, H&M, ZavaZone, Hot Topic, BoxLunch, Five Below, Bath ...
Tysons Corner Center is a shopping mall in the unincorporated area of Tysons in Fairfax County, Virginia, United States (between McLean and Vienna, Virginia).It opened to the public in 1968, becoming one of the first fully enclosed, climate-controlled shopping malls in the Washington metropolitan area.
Lynnhaven Mall is an enclosed super-regional shopping mall in Virginia Beach, Virginia, USA.It opened in August 1981. At 1,170,000 square feet (109,000 m 2) of gross leasable area, it is the largest mall in the Hampton Roads metropolitan area of southeastern Virginia and one of the largest malls on the East Coast.
This is a list of current and former notable shopping malls and shopping centers in the United States. Alabama. Riverchase Galleria, the largest mall in Alabama ...
Fair Oaks Mall officially opened on July 31, 1980. [3] The 1,400,000-square-foot (130,000 m 2) mall, developed by the Taubman Company, opened in the midst of a recession, with only four of six anchor stores in operation (Hecht's, JCPenney, Sears, and Woodward & Lothrop) and 15 other storefronts occupied, leaving three fourths of the storefronts empty.