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The store was Montgomery Ward's first purpose-built store in an Indianapolis mall, as their other three shopping mall stores (Lafayette Square, Washington Square, and Greenwood Park Mall) were all purchased from William H. Block Co. in 1988. Also unlike those stores, the Castleton Square location featured appliance and electronic repair centers ...
Eastgate Consumer Mall – Indianapolis (1972–2004) Eastland Mall – Evansville (1981–present) The Fashion Mall at Keystone – Indianapolis (1973–present) Five Points Mall – Marion (1978–2019) Glenbrook Square – Fort Wayne (1980–present) Glendale Mall – Indianapolis (1970–2007) Green Tree Mall – Clarksville (1968–present)
This is a list of shopping malls in the United States and its territories that have at least 2,000,000 total square feet 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.
Washington Square Mall (Indianapolis) Woodmar Mall This page was last edited on 18 August 2019, at 02:50 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
When the Mall of America first opened in August of 1992, it was called "The Mall That Ate Minnesota," by the New York Times. The "78-acre full-sensory smorgasbord of consumerism," as Neal Karlen ...
Starting in 1958, Block's opened stores that served as the original anchors at Glendale Shopping Center (1958), Southern Plaza (1961), Lafayette Square Mall (1969), and Washington Square Mall (1974), all in Indianapolis, and also at Tippecanoe Mall (1974) in Lafayette and Markland Mall (1974) in Kokomo.
The country's largest mall, the Mall of America, first opened to the public in August 1992. This photo was taken the same month and shows a group of shoppers around a mall kiosk selling t-shirts ...
Lafayette Square Mall is a defunct shopping mall in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. Developed in 1968 by Edward J. DeBartolo Sr., the mall is locally-owned by Sojos Capital Group. The anchor store is Shoppers World. There are three vacant anchor stores that were once Sears, L. S. Ayres, and Burlington.