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Within months of their purchase of ADG, May Department Stores exited the Cincinnati market. The Kenwood Plaza, Tri-County Center, and Northgate Mall locations were sold to the J.C. Penney Company, the Florence Mall store to Hess Brothers, and the downtown store closed. The Samuel Hannaford-designed building on Fourth Street was demolished to ...
Retail developer Jonathan Woodner first announced plans for Swifton Center in 1951, and sold his stake in the mall to Stahl Development in 1954. [2] The site chosen for the center was the southeast corner of Reading Road (U.S. Route 42) and Seymour Avenue within the city limits of Cincinnati, Ohio, a site determined by market analysts to be the center of population for the Cincinnati market at ...
Shillito's added a fourth level to its store in 1962, allowing for the store's lowest level to be dedicated to discounted merchandise; this concept, called the "basement store", also existed at their location in downtown Cincinnati. [5] Sears opened as the mall's third anchor store in May 1967. [6]
In 1983, Pogue's merged with their Indianapolis-based sister store L. S. Ayres and the store name changed accordingly. In 1988, L. S. Ayres closed all their Cincinnati locations. The Kenwood anchor was sold to JCPenney which closed in 1993. Birmingham, Alabama-based Parisian purchased the location in 1993.
This is a list of major companies and organizations in Greater Cincinnati, through corporate or subsidiary headquarters or through significant operational and employment presence near Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. Altogether, six Fortune 500 companies and seven Fortune 1000 companies have headquarters in the Cincinnati area. [1]
Buildings on 8th street in downtown have been transformed into false storefronts, picturedTuesday, Jan. 24, 2023. • A look at our 10 favorite celebrity sightings from 2023
The total office vacancy rate for downtown Cincinnati was 16.8% in the first quarter this year, up from 16.6% in the previous quarter, according to the latest Cincinnati office market report from ...
Located along Central Parkway on the edge of downtown, it is a late Victorian structure designed by Samuel Hannaford, [1] a renowned Cincinnati architect. [ 2 ] : 11 William F. Doepke, with his first cousins, William H. Alms, and Frederick H. Alms, established a dry goods store in Cincinnati in 1865 and moved to the northeastern corner of the ...