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Crossroads Mall was an enclosed shopping mall located in Omaha, Nebraska, United States, at the intersection of 72nd and Dodge Streets. Originally opened in 1960 by Omaha's Brandeis department store, the mall has been home to several major chains, including Sears, Target and Dillard's before the store closed in 2008. The mall is now demolished ...
By the late 1950s, Brandeis was looking for a way to expand and to modernize. One way to do this was by creating malls, anchored by Brandeis. In 1959, Brandeis Investment Co. developed the Crossroads Shopping Center in Midtown Omaha. [4] The mall was also anchored by Sears which closed in 2019. Crossroads was the 9th enclosed shopping mall in ...
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The Crossroads (Portage, Michigan), a shopping mall in Portage (Kalamazoo), Michigan; Crossroads Mall (Omaha), a shopping mall in Omaha, Nebraska; Crossroads Mall (Oklahoma), a former shopping mall in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Crossroads Mall (Virginia), a small shopping mall in Airport, Roanoke, Virginia; Crossroads Plaza (Salt Lake City), a ...
The mall has 500,000 square feet (46,000 m 2) of retail space, which was modeled after the success of Omaha's Crossroads Mall, which was also developed by Brandeis. Southroads was developed within the Southroads Complex near a Sears , which had been open since 1964.
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The history of Omaha, Nebraska, began before the settlement of the city, with speculators from neighboring Council Bluffs, Iowa staking land across the Missouri River illegally as early as the 1840s. When it was legal to claim land in Indian Country , William D. Brown was operating the Lone Tree Ferry to bring settlers from Council Bluffs to Omaha.
With the prosperity following World War II, the company expanded by opening branch stores in the University District of Seattle at University Village (1956), Crossroads Mall in Bellevue (July 1964), and in Lake Forest Center Mall in Lake Forest Park (October, 1964). [2] Rhodes' flagship Seattle store, 1928-1968