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Monroe Crossing Mall (Monroe Crossing) is a 395,000 square feet (37,000 m 2) [1] regional mall located in Monroe, Union County, North Carolina, United States.The mall houses a mix of local and national retailers and anchor stores.
The Mall of Monroe, formerly known as Frenchtown Square Mall, is an enclosed shopping mall in Frenchtown Charter Township in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is located just north of the city of Monroe along North Monroe Street . Opened in 1988, the mall features more than thirty tenants and a church.
PetSmart stores will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Other stores open on New Year's Day. All stores listed below will be open on Jan. 1. Hours are listed for the companies that provided them ...
RiverTown Crossings is a two-story enclosed super-regional shopping mall in Grandville, Michigan.It has six occupied anchors: Macy's, Kohl's, JCPenney, Dick's Sporting Goods Celebration Cinema and Soar N Bounce with one vacant anchor formerly occupied by Sears, and one half vacant anchor last occupied by Younkers.
The Sears store at the Mall at Tuttle Crossing in Dublin, Ohio, photographed on Friday, Dec. 28, 2018. The store closed in early 2019. The new owners.
The retail portion, which also will include a QuickChek convenience store and fuel stations, sits in front of K. Hovnanian's Four Seasons at Manalapan Crossing, a development with 280 single ...
Park Road Shopping Center, Charlotte, NC. Park Road Shopping Center opened up on November 15, 1956 and was Charlotte's very first open area-type shopping mall. Developed by A.V. Blankenship, it is typical of Mid-Century modern architecture and the original billboard sign remains today. When the mall was first envisioned, it was considered to be ...
An interior entrance to the Macy's store in May 2015. This was taken before the store opened for the day. Southland Center, planned by Detroit-based Hudson's as early as 1962, [2] was designed by Victor Gruen Associates and Louis G. Redstone Associates, and the newly formed Dayton-Hudson Corporation (a merger of Hudson's and Dayton's of Minneapolis) developed the mall. [3]