Dimond Center

Coordinates: 61°08′35″N 149°52′05″W / 61.143116°N 149.86815°W / 61.143116; -149.86815
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Dimond Center
Map
LocationAnchorage, Alaska, USA
Address800 E Dimond Blvd, Anchorage, AK 99515
No. of stores and services200+
No. of anchor tenants2
Total retail floor area728,000 square feet (67,600 m2)
No. of floors2 main
ParkingFree, uncovered

The Dimond Center is a 728,000 ft² (67,000 m²) regional shopping mall in Anchorage, Alaska, United States. Although the newly built open air Tikahtnu commons on the oposite side of town has a greater GLA, it still holds the title as the largest enclosed mall in the state of Alaska.[1] It is located on the southwest corner of East Dimond Boulevard and the Old Seward Highway in south Anchorage.

The mall is anchored by Best Buy and Forever 21 and contains over 200 stores, restaurants and services, including a six-story office tower at the mall’s southeast corner. Other facilities include a post office, an arcade and a 9-screen Regal Cinemas theater equipped with luxury king size recliners.[2] The lower level in the office tower also contains a small food court, a bowling alley, and an athletic club, all arrayed around an ice skating rink. The office tower is home to the Anchorage branch of iHeartMedia (formerly Clear Channel Radio), including the studios of radio stations KASH, KBFX, KENI, KGOT, KTZN and KYMG.

History

The section line road leading south from Anchorage to the rural settlements of Rabbit Creek and Potter became the Seward Highway in the early 1950s and the Old Seward Highway about 20 years later with the construction of a 4-lane freeway slightly to the east. The Old Seward Highway formed the backbone of what became south Anchorage, both in terms of access to residential subdivisions and homesteads, as well as businesses which catered to both nearby residents and highway travelers.

As south Anchorage began to grow, the intersections of the Old Seward Highway with Dowling Road and with O'Malley Road originally began to develop as commercial hubs for the area. This changed after Larry Carr and Barney Gottstein acquired and subsequently developed large amounts of acreage throughout Anchorage, mostly with intent to expand the Carrs grocery chain. Their initial foray into south Anchorage occurred at the corner of Dimond and Old Seward, across Dimond Boulevard from the east end of what became the Dimond Center. This turned what was originally intended as industrial land into retail land, no doubt helped by the development boom associated with the trans-Alaska pipeline during the 1970s.

Dimond Center opened in 1977 with Safeway and Pay 'n Save as its anchor stores.[3] It underwent a major expansion in 1981, adding a replacement Pay 'n Save drug store and other stores.[4] In 1982, a competing development, the Great Northern Mall, was announced for the tract of land across the Old Seward Highway from the mall. Owing to a real estate-related economic crash which befell Anchorage during the most of the middle and late 1980s, only a small portion of that proposed development was ever constructed, mostly near the Dimond Boulevard and New Seward Highway intersection. This tract was fully developed during the 1990s, centered on big-box stores, which supplement the Dimond Center as a destination for shoppers from a vast geogrpahical area.

A refrigerant leak on May 20, 1991 resulted in the death of the skating rink's assistant manager and injured 33 others, including six who were hospitalized. 1996 saw the addition of a movie theater.[5] The Dimond Center Hotel was later built on the mall's southwest corner, which was largely financed by Seldovia's Native corporation, Seldovia Native Association, Inc. The Samson-Dimond Library, a branch of the Anchorage Public Library and an original tenant of the mall, closed at the end of 2010, a victim of budget cuts.[6]

The mall has been undergoing a great deal of renovation/expansion over the last few years[when?] with hopes to, “Generate a new shopping experience.[7]” Recent[when?] additions have brought several new shops and restaurants to the mall including a Chili’s and an Olive Garden to the mall’s west end.

Anchors

References

  1. ^ Dimond Center store directory
  2. ^ http://www.regmovies.com/Theatres/Theatre-Folder/Regal-Dimond-Center-9-Cinemas-848
  3. ^ Anchorage Daily News, Alaska, Business Question and Answer Column (Brief article)
  4. ^ This Week in Alaska Business History July 08, 2001
  5. ^ DIMOND CENTER TO ADD THEATER ACT III PLANS NINE-SCREEN COMPLEX IN SOUTH ANCHORAGE MALL (brief article)
  6. ^ Musgrave, Jackie; Stockert, Clare (December 2011). Our History 1917—2011 (PDF) (Second ed.). Anchorage: Anchorage Public Library. p. 15. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  7. ^ http://www.alaskajournal.com/Alaska-Journal-of-Commerce/February-Issue-1-2014/Housing-commercial-markets-near-capacity-around-state/

External links

61°08′35″N 149°52′05″W / 61.143116°N 149.86815°W / 61.143116; -149.86815