Rosedale Center
Location | Roseville, Minnesota, USA |
---|---|
Coordinates | 45°0′45″N 93°10′20″W / 45.01250°N 93.17222°W |
Address | 10 Rosedale Center |
Opening date | 1969 |
Developer | Dayton-Hudson Corporation |
Management | Jones Lang LaSalle |
No. of stores and services | 164[1] |
No. of anchor tenants | 3 |
Total retail floor area | 1,149,487 square feet (106,790.8 m2)[1] |
No. of floors | 2 |
Parking | 5,759 |
Website | www.myrosedale.com |
Rosedale Center, commonly known just as Rosedale, is a shopping center in Roseville, Minnesota. The mall is considered a regional powerhouse as a shopping destination; surrounded by suburbs and close to major highways, it serves a trade area population almost 2 million people, and boasts 12 million visitors a year.[1][2]
History
Built in 1969, it is the third of the "dale" shopping centers built by the Dayton-Hudson Corporation. Southdale Center (1956), in Edina, Minnesota was the first. This was followed by Brookdale Center (1962) in Brooklyn Center, and later by Ridgedale Center (1974) in Minnetonka.[3]
Originally, Rosedale was anchored by Dayton's and Donaldson's department stores. A JCPenney was added, as part of a new North Wing, in 1976; a Montgomery Ward also joined in the 1970s. The mall underwent a major renovation that was completed in 1992. A new Dayton's was added as well (the old Dayton's was rebuilt as new retail spaces). Two parking garages were constructed as well.
The vacant east anchor (originally a Donaldson's, then a Carson Pirie Scott and Mervyn's) was demolished in 2005. Developers built a new, open-air, lifestyle wing, anchored by an AMC theater. This expansion, officially known as the Plaza at Rosedale Center, was dedicated in November 2006. Tenants included Chipotle, Granite City, Ann Taylor Loft and Williams-Sonoma.[2] The 14-screen, AMC cinema was completed the next month.
Events
Shopping
Following the success of their stores in New York, the Macy's at Rosedale Center became their first store in Minnesota to have 24-hour shopping during the 2009 Christmas season.[4]
Anchors
Future anchor
- Von Maur (140,000 sq ft (13,000 m2)) (opening Fall 2018)
Current anchors
- Herberger's (150,923 sq ft (14,021.2 m2)) (originally Montgomery Ward)
- Macy's (259,453 sq ft (24,104.0 m2))
- JCPenney (164,772 sq ft (15,307.8 m2))[1]
Former anchors
- Dayton's (became Marshall Field's in 2001, Macy's in 2006)
- Donaldson's (later Carson Pirie Scott, Mervyn's; store demolished for "Lifestyle Center" in 2005.)
- Mervyn's (demolished for lifestyle center in 2005, and rebuilt as Borders and AMC movie theatre)
- Montgomery Ward (became Herberger's in 2002)
- Borders Books (closed in 2011 during the chain's bankruptcy)
Lifestyle center
References
- ^ a b c d "Rosedale Center" (PDF). Jones Lang LaSalle. Retrieved 2011-03-17.
- ^ a b "ROSEDALE CENTER". Minnesota Monthly. August 2009. Retrieved 2011-03-18.
- ^ McCartney, Jim (October 2002), FORTY YEARS ON, THE ‘DALES’ STILL THRIVE, DESPITE MALL OF AMERICA, International Council of Shopping Centers, retrieved 2011-03-17
- ^ Chris Newmarker (December 20, 2010). "24-hour shopping back at Rosedale Center Macy's". St. Paul Business Journal.
External links