The Landmark Mall (or Landmark Regional Shopping Center) was an American shopping mall. Located in a triangle formed by Duke Street (Virginia State Route 236), Shirley Highway (I-395), and Van Dorn Street (Virginia State Route 401) in Alexandria, Virginia, the mall opened in 1965 and closed its doors temporarily for renovation into an "urban-town" on January 31, 2017. The mall is anchored by Sears and two vacant anchors last occupied by Lord & Taylor and Macy's
Video Landmark Mall
History
The mall opened on August 4, 1965, with Virginia Lt. Gov. Mills E. Godwin, Jr. cutting the ceremonial ribbon. It was the first mall in the Washington D.C. area to feature three anchor department stores; the Hecht Company (later Macy's, now vacant) (163,000 square feet (15,100 m2)), Sears and Roebuck (236,000 square feet (21,900 m2)), and Woodward & Lothrop (later JCPenney, then Lord & Taylor, now vacant) (151,000 sq ft). By that time of its opening, it had 32 stores in the 675,000-square-foot (62,700 m2) center including Bond Clothes, Casual Corner, People's Drug Store, Raleigh Haberdasher, Thom McAn, and Waldenbooks. The center also included the second location of S&W Cafeteria in the Washington D.C. suburbs.
Originally an outdoor mall, it was enclosed in 1990.
In 2006 the mall's owner, General Growth Properties, announced its plan to convert the mall to an open-air "town center" shopping center. The plans were not realized.
Howard Hughes Corporation became the new owner in 2009. Lord & Taylor announced in May the same year that it would be closing its store at the mall.
The Howard Hughes Corporation showed it plan to transform the site into an 'urban town' in 2013. The plan would turn the mall into an outdoor center with retail and residential facilities.
In June 2013, Alexandria City Council approved the plans to redevelop the mall.
On January 4, 2017, Macy's announced it would close its Landmark Mall store that year. Subsequently, the mall's owners notified tenants (except Sears) they were to vacate by January 31, indicating that approved redevelopment is imminent. At final build out, Landmark will transform into a walkable, mixed-use urban village with approximately 317,000 square feet (29,500 m2) of modern shops and restaurants, up to 400 new residential units and an updated parking structure. In addition to the new retail and residences, the new Landmark will be an open-air community destination featuring multiple plazas and green spaces, outdoor seating, seasonal entertainment and public art. There will be numerous full-service and fast-casual dining options, and a 10-screen luxury cinema.
Maps Landmark Mall
References
External links
- Landmark Mall website
- DEAD MALL SERIES: Landmark Mall
Source of the article : Wikipedia