Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first phase of Eastland Mall's demolition must be completed by May 31, according to an agreement between the city and the owner of the mall.
The reason for the demolition was often that the condition of the building was no longer adequate, but in some cases, its style was already ostentatious and outdated. Another aspect taken into consideration is that because the cost of renovating a building is very high, demolition is sometimes seen as preferable over renovation.
The mall was built in 1968 by Richard E. Jacobs group, who also developed Columbus's Northland and Westland Malls. [3] It was the first enclosed shopping mall in Columbus. [1] As with the other two "directional" Jacobs malls in Columbus, Eastland's original anchors included J. C. Penney, Sears, and Lazarus. [4]
The demolition crew at the Columbus City Center mall in 2009, later made into Columbus Commons. S.G. Loewendick & Sons was founded by Sylvester G. "Tedo" Loewendick. He was the son of a German immigrant who settled in Newark, Ohio. Tedo was employed as a shop foreman and then garage owner for years, though in 1929 moved to demolition, tearing ...
A half-mile from the shuttered Eastland Mall, inside a defunct Kroger, a free grocery market and social services hub is planned. Columbus pledges $4 million to help revitalize old Eastland Mall ...
Forest Park City Council tabled a request at its July 15 meeting from Smyjunas to rezone more than 40 acres on the Forest Park side of the mall from planned business to industrial park use to ...
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places entries in Columbus, Ohio, United States. The National Register is a federal register for buildings, structures, and sites of historic significance. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts in Columbus.
Demolition work formally began Wednesday at Richland Mall, as workers kicked off what will be a year-long process to tear down and clear off the more than 900,000-square-foot structure.