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Gateway Center, also referred to as Gateway Plaza Mall [5] or simply Gateway Mall, is a shopping complex in the Spring Creek section of East New York, Brooklyn, in New York City. It is located just north of the Belt Parkway at Erskine Street and Gateway Drive, which is near portions of the Gateway National Recreation Area.
In 2000, construction took place nearby Pennsylvania Avenue, across the Hendrix Creek in East New York to build a $192 million shopping complex, situated on the Belt Parkway. The shopping complex, known as the Gateway Center, was built on the Pennsylvania Avenue and Fountain Avenue Landfills, a 230-acre (0.93 km 2) Brooklyn landfill complex.
The Walt Whitman Shopping Center, as it was called then, was built by the Winston-Muss Corporation and featured a Japanese garden, aviary, and sculpted mobile based on the poetry of Walt Whitman. [5] [6] By January 1963, the facility was fully rented. [7] In May, a single-screen movie theater opened, operated by Century. [8]
This page was last edited on 10 October 2023, at 11:16 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
No. of stores and services: 35: No. of anchor tenants: 4: Total retail floor area: 370,000 sq ft (34,000 m 2) in Atlantic Terminal 393,713 sq ft (36,577.1 m 2) in Atlantic Center: No. of floors: 5 in Atlantic Terminal: Public transit access: Long Island Rail Road: Atlantic Terminal (Atlantic Branch)
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Gateway Mall (Lincoln, Nebraska), a shopping mall in Lincoln, Nebraska Gateway Center Mall , an outdoor shopping mall in the Spring Creek neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York St. Louis Gateway Mall , the strip of land in downtown St. Louis, Missouri, from the Gateway Arch to Union Station
The Cheshill Realty Corporation acquired 25 parcels for the store through private negotiations in 1931–1932; the Brooklyn Eagle called the purchases the "Flatbush mystery". The announcement of the new store, coinciding with two others in Union City and Hackensack, New Jersey, was only made once all the land had been purchased. [1]