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Westfield is a brand name for retail shopping centres originated by the Australian Westfield Group in 1960, and now shared between Scentre Group (for Westfield centres in Australia and New Zealand) [1] and Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield (for Westfield centres in the European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States). [2] [3]
Eastgate Mall is a shopping mall located in Glen Este, Ohio, in the suburbs of Cincinnati, Ohio. The mall contains over 55 stores. The anchor stores are Dillard's, Kohl's, and JCPenney. There is 1 vacant anchor store that was once Sears. Hull Property Group owns and manages the mall (As of September 2023). [1]
Black Friday sale signs are seen at a Target store in Chicago on Nov. 26, 2024, ahead of the Black Friday shopping day.
A rendering of the dog park and bar Crate Escapes. The business is expected to open at 18595 Carousel Lane, just south of Grand Park Sports Campus in Westfield, in late 2024 or early 2025.
Some larger non-anchor stores include H&M and Forever 21. A Round One Entertainment is located in the former Sears wing. The Westfield Group acquired the shopping center in early 2002, and renamed it Westfield Shoppingtown Fox Valley, dropping the Shoppingtown name in June 2005. Westfield Group sold 80% interest in the mall as of December 2015. [2]
The first phase of the mall, featuring Bigg's and approximately 20 other stores, opened on July 11, 1988. A month prior to this, Higbee's withdrew from the project after being purchased by a joint venture of Dillard's and Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. [10] As a result, B. Altman was relocated from its originally planned store to the space vacated by Higbee's, thus leaving a vacant anchor store and ...
Its anchor stores are Boscov's, JCPenney, Macy's, and Target. The mall contains over 100 stores and restaurants across 1,600,000 sq ft (150,000 m 2) of space. The mall is part of the greater Eastwood Mall Complex, which includes a variety of outdoor strip plazas totaling in over 3,200,000 square feet (300,000 m 2) of shopping space.
At the time of opening, it consisted of 51 stores in 500,000 square feet (46,000 m 2) of shop space, with parking for up to 4,000 cars. A 1960 article in The Cincinnati Enquirer described the mall as "landscaped to give the appearance of a park", while also noting that it was the largest center built by Meyerhoff at the time. [ 4 ]