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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 ...
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.
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
The new owners of the former Chapel Hill Mall have turned the space into a business park. It's nearly at capacity. 'We're part of revitalizing retail': Former Chapel Hill Mall gets second life
The Murrells Inlet, SC mall sits mostly empty and has been wrapped up in litigation over unpaid bills for years. Now, a new group wants to redevelop it. The Inlet Square Mall could be getting ...
The former mall could have 350,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space, 60,000 square feet of offices, new apartments and a hotel when the dust settles. Chapel Hill lost a third of its mall ...
Chapel Square Mall (1967–2002). Now converted to luxury apartments; the first indoor shopping mall in the country to be converted as such. College Street Cinema; College (Hyperion) Theater (1880–1998) The Edw. Malley Co. (1852–1982). Demolished in 1997 and replaced by Gateway Community College. Kresge's. Converted into a parking garage ...
A Chick-fil-A inside the mall closed in 2021. The new restaurant replaced K&W Cafeteria and is part of a major redevelopment. Customers often crowd Chapel Hill’s Chick-fil-A restaurant.