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The Beaver Valley Mall is a regional shopping mall located in Center Township, Pennsylvania, serving Beaver County within the Pittsburgh metropolitan area. It is owned by the Namdar Realty Group . The mall features Boscov's , Dick's Sporting Goods , JCPenney , Rural King , and a U-Haul storage center.
Camp’s father Willie bought the original Beaver Supermarket from founder Abe Farkas in 1978 and operated it for a decade until 1988. Willie often brought his young son to work. Remembers Kevin:
After the Glosser Brothers company emerged from bankruptcy, it was put up for sale. It was purchased by Value City in May 1992, Many Gee Bee Stores were converted to the Value City format. The last Gee Bee Jr. store in Upper Yoder, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Johnstown, closed in 1993. Many of the rebranded Value City stores did not survive the ...
The store opened to Beaver County customers as Spencer Gifts on Sept. 23, 1970. ... While the disappearance of spots like Subway has left space at the food court, Chick-fil-A and Charlie's Philly ...
Giant Eagle opened its 20th Columbus-area store at New Albany Road at the Ohio Rt. 161 freeway in August 2007, its 21st area store at Hayden Run and Cosgray Roads in November 2007, its 22nd area store at Stelzer and McCutcheon Roads (Columbus) in July 2008 and its 23rd area store at South Hamilton Road and Winchester Pike in August 2008.
2 pizza places open. Mall Pizza BVM and Al's Pizza both opened last month. Mall Pizza BVM at the Beaver Valley Mall food court, opened Nov. 29. People lined up as far as the AT&T store and even to ...
The plaza opened in the late 1950s along Pennsylvania Route 65 (then part of Pennsylvania Route 88), serving as the major shopping center for the Beaver Valley. For decades, J. C. Penney was the main anchor store for the plaza, having a three-story store at the plaza.
With the 1997 demise of its owner, Burt Prentice Flickinger Jr., who had been instrumental in the success and growth of "S.M. Flickinger Co.", the company started a slow demise, and the last store disappeared in March 2010. Flickinger's son Burt III works as a consultant in the grocery industry. [1] [2] [3]