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The Charlotte Premium Outlets is a 399,000-square-foot (37,100 m 2) open-air outlet mall located in Charlotte, North Carolina. It is located off of Interstate 485 in the Steele Creek neighborhood . It is owned by a joint venture of 50% Simon Property Group and 50% Tanger Outlet Centers, Inc. [ 2 ]
Tanger Inc. is a real estate investment trust headquartered in Greensboro, North Carolina, that invests in shopping centers containing upscale outlet stores in the United States and Canada. As of November 2023, the company owns and manages 36 outlet centers across the US and Canada comprising 14.0 million square feet and more than 3,000 stores.
9070 Dixie Hwy, Louisville, KY 40258 Operated by AMC Theatres until purchase by Mid-States in 1977. USA Cinemas took over in 1986. Renamed Park Place Mall Cinemas in 1989. Closed in 1990. Location on map: Westonian Theatre Razed Wood's Theatre Razed
Shopping malls in Charlotte, North Carolina (9 P) ... Greenville Mall; H. Hanes Mall; I. ... Tanger Outlets Asheville;
Charlottetown Mall is a shopping mall located in North Carolina. The first enclosed shopping mall, it opened on October 28, 1959. Atlanta's Lenox Square opened two months earlier, but it was an open-air mall at first. The mall was situated on a 10-acre (40,000 m 2) parcel on the southeastern fringes of Charlotte's "center city" area.
Stanley K. Tanger (April 13, 1923 – October 23, 2010 [1]) was an American businessman, philanthropist and pioneer of the outlet shopping industry. Tanger founded Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, which began with a single location in Burlington, North Carolina in 1981, [2] and now has 45 shopping centers throughout the United States and Canada as of April 2015. [3]
Eastland Mall was a shopping mall in Charlotte, North Carolina. The center opened on July 30, 1975, as the then-largest mall in North Carolina with three anchor department stores, Belk, J.C. Penney, and Ivey's. A Sears, Roebuck and Company store joined four years later. [3] The mall was owned by Glimcher Realty Trust and the City of Charlotte.
In 1995, the Charlotte Convention Center relocated a few blocks south of its former location. The original Charlotte Convention Center closed shortly after, and was placed for sale. The building was on the market until The Ghazi Company purchased the 3.25-acre (1.32 ha) site in 2004 for $14.5 million. [2]