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The mall was designed by the architect Lou Resnick and developed by Jacobs, Visconsi, and Jacobs Co., of Cleveland, Ohio, the developer of Brookfield Square in Milwaukee. [1] The 56,000-square-foot (5,200 m 2) Manchester's store was later replaced by a food court. West Towne is the sister mall to the East Towne Mall which opened a year later.
Regency Mall is an enclosed super-regional shopping mall in Racine, Wisconsin. The mall has a gross leasable area of 872,409 square feet (81,049.4 m 2 ). [ 1 ] It features 110 retail spaces, [ 2 ] and six anchor stores, Dunham's Sports , Bob's Discount Furniture , Planet Fitness , Ross Dress For Less , Party City , and Joann .
Racine (/ r ə ˈ s iː n, r eɪ-/ ⓘ rə-SEEN, ray-) [8] is a city in and the county seat of Racine County, Wisconsin, United States.It is located on the shore of Lake Michigan at the mouth of the Root River, situated 22 miles (35 km) south of Milwaukee and 60 miles (97 km) north of Chicago. [9]
The United States Post Office in downtown Racine, Wisconsin is a post office operated by the United States Postal Service.It is located at 603 Main Street, in a classical revival-style building designed by the Office of the Supervising Architect under James A. Wetmore, [2] and completed in July 1931.
Regency Mall (Racine) S. Sherman Phoenix; Southridge Mall (Wisconsin) T. Titletown District; U. ... West Towne Mall; Westgate Mall (Madison) This page was ...
Metro Transit's routes were dramatically overhauled on July 19, 1998. Previously, all routes had passed through Capitol Square, making downtown the only interchange point for cross-town travel. The 1998 changes redesigned the entire network around four newly created "transfer points" on the north, east, south, and west sides of the city.
In 1912, the name was changed to the Racine Journal News. The newspaper's former radio station, WRJN , was founded in December 1926. Starbuck died in 1929, his son, Frank R. Starbuck, became publisher, and in 1932 the paper merged with the Racine Times-Call , the other local daily, to become the Journal Times .
The Elmendorf house at 1844 S. Wisconsin Avenue is a 2-story cream brick Italianate-styled home designed by Fredrick Graham and probably built about 1860 for Rev. John Elmendorf, a professor of "intellectual philosophy" and English literature at Racine College. In 1891 it was bought by Henry and Emilie Hurlburt, whose company made wagon hardware.