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The Outlet Collection Seattle opened on August 25, 1995, under the name "Supermall of the Great Northwest". [3]Its anchors then included Nordstrom Rack, Bed Bath and Beyond, Oshman's SuperSports USA (Later Sports Authority until 2016), Burlington Coat Factory, Saks Fifth Avenue (later Old Navy and Ulta Beauty), Marshalls (later Dave & Buster's), and Incredible Universe. [4]
The U.S. state of Washington has over 30 shopping malls, primarily in the major metropolitan areas of Seattle and Spokane as well as regional cities. Several shopping malls in the Seattle area, specifically in Bellevue, have positioned themselves as luxury options. [1]
The Outlet Collection Seattle – Auburn (1995–present) Pacific Place – Seattle (1998–present) River Park Square – Spokane (1974–present) South Hill Mall – Puyallup (1988–present) South Sound Center – Lacey (1966–2001) Spokane Valley Mall – Spokane Valley (1997–present) Tacoma Mall – Tacoma (1965–present)
White River Amphitheatre is a Live Nation managed concert venue, located 8 miles (13 km) east of Auburn, Washington and 7 miles (11 km) west of Enumclaw, Washington on the Muckleshoot Indian Reservation. It is 22 miles (35 km) northeast of Tacoma and 36 miles (58 km) southeast of Seattle. The capacity is 16,000, with 9,000 covered seats.
The Commons at Federal Way (formerly SeaTac Mall) is a regional [1] shopping mall located in Federal Way, Washington, and is the only indoor shopping center in the city. [2] ...
The company entered the outlet mall business in 2004 with the acquisition of Chelsea Property Group Inc. for $3.5 billion. [15] In April 2007, Simon and Farallon Capital acquired the Mills Corporation. [16] [17] Two years later, Simon tried to buy malls owned by General Growth Properties. [18]
Columbia Center is a shopping mall located in northwestern Kennewick, Washington, owned by Simon Property Group.It is the largest mall in southeastern Washington, with two Macy's stores (both formerly The Bon Marché) and JCPenney as its anchors. [3]
The mall was acquired by Burlington Investment Properties, the owners of the adjacent outlet mall, in April 2023 for $18.5 million. [13] It was rebranded as the Burlington Gallery in 2024 and new tenants were announced with a focus on non-retail uses; these include a church, pickleball club, and restaurants.