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Severance Center, also known as Severance Town Center, is a shopping center located in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, an inner ring Greater Cleveland suburb roughly 7 miles (11 km) from downtown Cleveland. It is anchored by The Home Depot , Dave's Markets , Marshall's , and OfficeMax , and four vacant anchors that were formerly Walmart , Borders ...
Jacobs' planned to convert the Tower's surround plaza into a shopping centre which would serve the Cleveland area. The resulting Galleria, a glass-enclosed 207,600-square-foot (19,290 m 2) mall, opened in late 1987. It was the first major retail venture in Downtown Cleveland since the 1920s.
Steelyard Commons is a shopping center in Cleveland, Ohio, having opened in 2007. The center gets its name for having been built on the site of the former LTV Steel Factory #2 in the city's Tremont neighborhood which closed in 2001. [1]
City View Center was a power center in Garfield Heights, Ohio, east of Cleveland.Positioned to be a regional shopping destination with stores such as Walmart, Giant Eagle, Dick's Sporting Goods and Bed Bath & Beyond, the development intended to increase Garfield Heights' commercial base soon developed into a modern dead mall, being built on landfill which soon liquified and caused damage to ...
Westgate Mall is a Greater Cleveland suburban shopping center established in the mid-1950s and revitalized in 2007 after a decline in visitors since the 1990s. The original building was located at the intersection of Center Ridge Road and West 210th Street Fairview Park, Ohio at the boundary of Rocky River, Ohio. Westgate Mall is now known as ...
Beachcliff Market Square is a mixed-use open air center situated off of Interstate 90 in Rocky River, Ohio, a suburb outside of Cleveland.. Beachcliff Market Square, the 110,000-square-foot (10,000 m 2) shopping center, was built in 1983 and was renovated in October 1988 to support more tenants.
Looking down the length of The Arcade Interior of The Arcade in downtown Cleveland, looking south toward Euclid Avenue; March 7, 1966 The Arcade (ca. 1910–1920). The Arcade in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, is a Victorian-era structure of two nine-story buildings, joined by a five-story arcade with a glass skylight spanning over 300 feet (91 m), along the four balconies. [2]
Lee–Harvard Shopping Plaza; Cleveland Industrial Park – this community's largest development site. At 114 acres, this industrial park is located near I-480 with interchanges at Lee Road and Broadway Avenue, and was created by city government in 1981.