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Beaumont Centre is a neighborhood and major retail and office park in southwestern Lexington, Kentucky, United States.Its boundaries are New Circle Road to the north, the older Harrods Hill neighborhood to the south, Man o' War Boulevard to the west, and Harrodsburg Road to the east. [1]
The Mall at Lexington Green opened to the public on September 11, 1986, as a two-level hybrid enclosed mall and strip mall. From 1986 to 2007 the mall saw many different in and out tenants originally anchored by Disc Jockey Music, Joseph-Beth Booksellers, and Sears Homelife. The mall space was originally very vacant with only a few businesses ...
City Center, formerly known as CentrePointe, [1] is a residential, commercial, and retail building in downtown Lexington, Kentucky that opened in 2020. [2] The plan consists of a 12-story office tower incorporating premium luxury condominiums in its top three floors, two hotels, retail spaces and an underground parking garage.
The proposal calls for a 122,000-square-foot store with a separate 5,000-square-foot liquor store next door with a separate entrance and a fuel center as part of a 20-acre development.
This is the second location of the gourmet brunch restaurant in Lexington. The first opened in February 2022 at 652 E. Main in the former A&W burger spot and serves breakfast all day (or at least ...
Fayette Mall was opened by developer Richard E. Jacobs Group Inc. on April 20, 1971, supplanting Turfland Mall as Lexington's largest shopping mall. [2] Its original anchor stores included Sears, Shillito's (became Shillito-Rike's in 1982, Lazarus in 1986, Lazarus-Macy's in 2003, now Macy's since 2005) and Stewart Dry Goods (became L. S. Ayres in 1985, Ben Snyder's in 1987, Hess's in 1988, now ...
A nearly 60-acre mixed-use development, which could include national and regional businesses and a “residential component” is being planned in a bustling section of Lexington County.
The mall was at 100% capacity and many stores were leading the nation in sales. The Karmelkorn Shoppe became the number one sales-leader in the nation for the month of December 1988 selling 16,250 pounds, or roughly eight tons, of popcorn; [4] it was expected that it would be the number one chain again in December 1989 since same-store revenues had increased 30%.