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The Shops at Palm Desert (previously Westfield Palm Desert) is a shopping mall located in Palm Desert, California which serves the Coachella Valley. The mall features the traditional retailers Macy's, JCPenney, Dick's Sporting Goods, and Barnes & Noble, with 122 inline stores. In addition, the mall includes a food court and Tristone Palm Desert ...
North Star Mall: 1985 open Los Angeles/ Inland Empire Palm Springs: Palm Springs (2nd location) Desert Fashion Plaza: 1985 [87] 2001 or −2 [88] 021 621 TL Tulsa: Tulsa Utica Square: 48,000 sq ft (4,500 m 2) [89] 1986 open 006 CL Monterey Co., California Carmel: Carmel Carmel Plaza [57] [90] Added former I. Magnin space in 1995 [61] May 1986 ...
Indian Springs Mall – Kansas City (1971–2011; demolished) Leavenworth Plaza – Leavenworth (1967–2015; demolished except for ACE Hardware and the former Sears) Legends Outlets Kansas City – Kansas City (2006–present. Outdoor outlet mall) Manhattan Town Center – Manhattan (1987–present)
The Beginning of 24/7 Hours. The innovator of the 24-hour-a-day store is 7-Eleven, which traces its roots to the Southland Ice Company, which sold ice from docks in Dallas and San Antonio in the ...
Tanger Outlets Palm Beach has stores featuring some of the world's biggest brands at its campus off Interstate 95 in West Palm Beach.
Palm Springs Mall – Palm Springs; Redlands Mall – Redlands (1977–2011) Sunnyvale Town Center – Sunnyvale (1979–2018) – now Cityline Sunnyvale; Vallco Shopping Mall – Cupertino (1976–2020) Valley Plaza – North Hollywood (August 12, 1951 – present) – most elements abandoned or demolished, some remain
After changing its name to Tween Brands in 2006 and shuttering or rebranding most locations a few years later, Blue Alliance acquired the name Limited Too and relaunched almost 200 stores in 2016.
The site of the Desert Fashion Plaza was formerly a resort hotel named the Desert Inn opened and operated by Nellie Coffman, an early settler of Palm Springs. [8] After Nellie's death in the 1950s, her sons George Roberson and Earl Coffman, who had continuously assisted Nellie in the operation of the Inn, sold it in 1955 to actress Marion Davies.