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The mall was designed by New York architects Lathrop Douglas, with two levels and 165,000 square feet (15,300 m 2). It was anchored by two adjacent department stores: the New Haven -based Edw. Malley Co. , (1962–1982) (which was relocated here from where Chapel Square's office tower and Omni Hotel are now located), and a large branch of New ...
Chapel Square Mall; Civic Center Mall; Connecticut Post Mall; Crystal Mall (Connecticut) D. Danbury Fair (shopping mall) E. East Brook Mall; Enfield Square; H. Hawley ...
The second location, which opened October 25, 1962, [14] measured 266,000 [17] square feet and had three levels above ground and two below. [3] It was connected by a walkway on the second floor to Macy's, across the street, which was, in turn, connected by bridge to the Chapel Square Mall, leading to the New Haven Green.
Another former Chapel Hill Mall fixture, the old mall carousel, was donated by the Chapel Hill Business Park’s owner, Industrial Commercial Properties (ICP), to the city of Akron in 2021.
A new public green and roughly a dozen new storefronts could open at Chapel Hill’s University Place mall by 2025.
East Lake Square Mall; Eastern Hills Mall; Eastfield Mall; Eastgate Consumer Mall; Eastgate Mall (Chattanooga) Eastland Center (Michigan) Eastland Mall (Columbus, Ohio) Eastland Mall (North Versailles, Pennsylvania) Eastwood Mall (Birmingham) The Esplanade (Kenner, Louisiana) Euclid Square Mall; Eugene Mall; Evergreen Plaza
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Pinellas Square Mall – Pinellas Park (1977–2004) Plantation Towne Mall – Plantation (1971–1996) Pompano Citi Centre – Pompano Beach (1970–present) Port Charlotte Town Center – Port Charlotte (1989–present) Regency Square Mall – Jacksonville (1967–present) Santa Rosa Mall – Mary Esther (1976–present)