Mall of Abilene

Mall of Abilene is an enclosed shopping mall in Abilene, Texas. It is located in the growing south side of the city, at the southwest corner of the busiest intersection in Abilene at Buffalo Gap Road and US 83/84 (Winters Freeway). Occupying a 61-acre plot of land, It serves a 22-county trade area. Five stores anchor the mall JCPenney, Dillard's, Best Buy, Ulta, and Books-A-Million with one vacant anchor last occupied by Sears. The mall also houses the 15,000 sq ft (1,400 m2) Premiere Cinema 10 in a converted UA Theaters 6[2]. The mall's gross leasable area of nearly 1,000,000 sq ft (93,000 m2) consists of a total of 80 stores, excluding the theater, 7 of which have a leasable area of at least 56,000 sq ft (5,200 m2). It also boasts an annual foot traffic of 19.2 million visitors.[3]

Mall of Abilene
LocationAbilene, Texas, United States
Coordinates32.4004°N 99.7621°W / 32.4004; -99.7621
Address4310 Buffalo Gap Road
Opening dateMarch 14, 1979
DeveloperPaul Broadhead[1]
ManagementJones Lang LaSalle
OwnerJones Lang LaSalle
No. of stores and services80
No. of anchor tenants6 (5 open, 1 vacant)
Total retail floor area680,457 sq ft (63,216.5 m2)
No. of floors1 (2 in former Sears)
Parking3689 spaces
Websitewww.mallofabilene.com
Sears (now closed) with circa 1963 logo

History

Print Of Reporter News Clipping Depicting The Mall's Corridor Configuration

The Mall of Abilene began its development in 1977, when ground was broken for a new shopping complex in the growing southern reaches of Abilene. Developed by Paul Broadhead & Associates, the complex would initially cost $28 million to develop, with the mall opening to shoppers in March 1979.[4]

The mall would open with Dillard's, JCPenney, Sears, H. J. Wilson Co. (later Service Merchandise, now the second Dillard's store) and Grissom's (later Dunlap's, now Best Buy, Books-a-Million, and Ulta) as its anchor stores.[5]

The mall's initial junior anchors would be Beall's, UA Theaters 6, Lerner's and Luby's Cafeteria.[6]

Some original inline tenants would include; Chik-Fil-A, Express, GNC, El Chico, Footaction, Motherhood Maternity, Spencer's and Zales; all of which have been at the mall for the last 40 years.

As the years progressed the makeup of these tenants had partially changed, at one point Grissom's was replaced by Dunlaps. Wilson's would re-open as Service Merchandise in 1985.

Later on, tenants like Ulta Beauty and Chuck-E-Cheese would occupy the two spaces next to the main entrance, with the vacant Luby's becoming Ulta Beauty.

On December 28, 2018, it was announced that Sears would be closing as part of a plan to close 80 stores nationwide. The store closed in March 2019.[7]

Tenants


JCPenney with circa 1971 logo


Anchors[8]

Exterior Entrances To Books-A-Million and Ulta Beauty

Specialty Stores[9]

Premiere Cinema 10, in the former UA Theaters 6

Restaurants[10]

Cinemas[11]

gollark: Or second person.
gollark: I don't think you know how pronouns work.
gollark: Oh, no, it bills you for realspace land it uses.
gollark: Actually, it [REDACTED] negative curvature spacetime [DATA EXPUNGED] apeirogon.
gollark: I don't think you know what selfreplicating means.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.