Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The development was named Thruway because it was near a planned east-west superhighway expected to be named the Thruway. [2] [3] The $1.5 million center would include a 16,400-square-foot Food Fair grocery store, part of a chain owned by Messick. It was also have a 14,000-square-foot F.W. Woolworth, a 9000-square-foot Eckerd Drug, a laundromat ...
Entrance to Marketplace Mall, July 2011. Marketplace Mall is a one-story and second shopping mall in Winston-Salem on NC 150 (Peters Creek Parkway) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States. Its main anchor stores are Dollar Tree & Hamrick's. The mall opened in 1984. [1] Hamrick's was added in 1995. [2]
Northway Shopping Center – Colonie (1970–1999) Oakdale Commons – Johnson City (1975–present) Palisades Center – West Nyack (1998–present) Penn-Can Mall – Cicero (1976–1996) Poughkeepsie Galleria – Poughkeepsie (1987–present) Queens Center Mall – Elmhurst, Queens (1973–present)
Pages in category "Shopping malls in North Carolina" ... Marketplace Mall (Winston-Salem) Mayberry Mall; ... Thruway Center; U.
Hanes Mall is a shopping mall located off I-40 via the Stratford Road and Hanes Mall Boulevard exits, on Silas Creek Parkway.Hanes Mall Boulevard, the road named after the mall, has become a very high traffic count area with over 250 businesses stretching over 2.9 miles.
Salem Cemetery (Winston-Salem, North Carolina) Salem Square; Salem Tavern; Salem Town Hall; Shamrock Mills; Shell Service Station (Winston-Salem, North Carolina) Smith Reynolds Airport; W. F. Smith and Sons Leaf House and Brown Brothers Company Building; Sosnik-Morris-Early Commercial Block; Spruce Street YMCA; Stevens Center
Miller's was the first store in Winston-Salem to offer bell-bottoms in the area in the 1960s. Miller's was listed by Playboy magazine in 1968 as a popular place to shop. [31] In 1929, the local T.W. Garner Foods introduced Texas Pete, a popular hot sauce. [32]
Reynolda Village is a shopping and business complex in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, created from the servant and agricultural buildings of Reynolda, the former R. J. Reynolds estate. The village, which covers around 13.5 acres (5.5 ha), [ 1 ] was planned as a working model farm , designed by Charles Barton Keen and Willard C. Northup in the ...