The Mall at Robinson

The Mall at Robinson is a super-regional shopping mall located just off the Parkway West (I-376) and PA Route 60 in Robinson Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, five minutes east of the Pittsburgh International Airport and 15 minutes from downtown Pittsburgh.[1] Opened in October 2001, it consists of 872,000 square feet (81,000 m2) of retail space and sits on over 200 acres (0.81 km2). The mall is owned and managed by Queensland Investment Corporation of Brisbane, Australia.

The Mall at Robinson
One of the main entrances to The Mall at Robinson
LocationRobinson Township, Pennsylvania
Opening dateOctober 2001
DeveloperForest City Enterprises
ManagementQueensland Investment Corporation
OwnerQueensland Investment Corporation
No. of stores and servicesc. 150
No. of anchor tenants4 (3 open, 1 vacant)
Total retail floor area872,000 sq ft (81,000 m2)
No. of floors2
Websitewww.shoprobinsonmall.com

The mall sits adjacent to Robinson Town Centre, located in the center of a growing retail area that includes Settlers Ridge and The Pointe at North Fayette in North Fayette Township, Pennsylvania.

Anchors

Anchor stores are Dick's Sporting Goods, JCPenney, and Macy's.

Macy's is the northern-most anchor with the former Sears serving as the southern-most anchor. The Dick's Sporting Goods store sits in the south east corner with JCPenney situated on the west side of the two-floor complex.

A free-standing Kaufmann's department store was built in 1998 and sat as the only operating store until the remainder of the mall property was opened in 2001.

On May 31, 2018, it was announced that Sears would be closing as part of a plan to close 72 stores nationwide. The store closed in September 2018.[2]

Stores

The mall is home to over 150 stores including American Eagle Outfitters, Banana Republic, Carter's, FYE, GAP, Hot Topic, LOFT, PacSun, Rue 21, Victoria's Secret, White House Black Market and Zumiez. The mall's food court sits on the second floor near the former Sears.

gollark: I figure people are mostly prompted by *something* instead of just bringing it up entirely at random, and a ControversialEsolangs server would lack many of those prompts if it's purely for that.
gollark: And controversial stuff has never arisen from discussing something else?
gollark: The idea of a "ControversialEsolangs" for that probably wouldn't work well for various reasons, including the difficulty of moving active conversations, cognitive overhead of switching and lots of overhead deciding when to switch, a smaller set of people there even if they could otherwise participate interestingly, and somewhat more difficult-to-express issues like, er, selection effects.
gollark: I think it's a nice-to-have property but not worth sacrificing much else for.
gollark: You can see when it is *happening*, if you happen to be active, and ignore it for a bit.

See also

References

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