Woodland Mall
Location | Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA |
---|---|
Coordinates | 42°54′59″N 85°35′16″W / 42.91629°N 85.5879°W |
Opening date | 1968 |
Developer | Taubman Centers |
Management | Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust |
Owner | Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust |
No. of stores and services | 100+ |
No. of anchor tenants | 3 |
Total retail floor area | 1,158,942 sq ft (107,700 m2)[1] |
No. of floors | 1 (2 for anchors and Barnes and Noble) |
Website | www.shopwoodlandmall.com |
Woodland Mall is an enclosed super-regional shopping mall located just outside the city of Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States. It comprises over 100 tenants in 1,158,942 square feet (107,669.2 m2) of retail space, with three anchor stores (JCPenney, Sears, and Macy's), along with Barnes & Noble, Forever 21, H&M and The North Face as junior anchors and a movie theater (opened as Cinemark, now Celebration Cinema). The mall is owned and managed by Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust, who acquired it from its developer, Taubman Centers, in 2006.
History
Woodland Mall opened in 1968 at the northwestern corner of 28th Street (M-11) and East Beltline Avenue (M-37). The mall was built at a southwest-to-northeast orientation, with Sears at the southwestern end, and JCPenney at the northeastern end. A Kresge dime store was also located in the Sears wing. Another mall, Eastbrook Mall (now Centerpointe Mall), was located on the northeastern corner of the same intersection. A 1975 expansion to Woodland Mall brought a northwesternly-oriented central wing which ended in a third anchor store, Hudson's. After the closure of Kresge in 1987, the store's former space was divided among smaller retailers.
Lord & Taylor was proposed in 1997 as a fourth anchor store at the southeastern end of the mall. However, Hudson's attempted to sue the mall, claiming veto power over the addition of new anchor stores, and the Lord & Taylor was never built.[2] A food court and play area were added adjacent to JCPenney in 1999. Also in 1999, RiverTown Crossings opened in Grandville, on the other side of town. This was the first serious form of retail competition for Woodland Mall, as prior to the opening of RiverTown Crossings, Woodland was the only super-regional mall in the Grand Rapids area.[3]
Hudson's was converted to Marshall Field's in 2001 in a nameplate consolidation by parent Target Corp.(formerly known as Dayton-Hudson), and then to Macy's in 2006 as the result of an acquisition. A 14-screen movie theater (then owned by Cinemark) and a Red Robin and On the Border restaurant were added to the southeastern portion of the mall in 2006, the same year in which Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust acquired the mall from Taubman.[4] Celebration Cinema purchased the movie theater complex (as well as a former Cinemark at RiverTown Crossings) a year later.
Barnes & Noble, in October 2008, announced that it would be relocating from a nearby store to a new location at the mall.[5] On Wednesday, October 21, 2009, the two-story bookstore opened to the public. In 2013, Forever 21 expanded its store in the mall, and H&M announced that it would be opening its first Western Michigan location.[6]
Transportation
As of May 25, 2010, six Interurban Transit Partnership bus routes serve the mall: routes 5 and 6 to Central Station, route 17 to Gerald R. Ford Airport, routes 24 and 28 to Grandville Library, and route 44 to Rivertown Crossings Mall.
References
- ^ "Woodland Mall Property Overview". PREIT. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
- ^ Skyview Local Summary
- ^ "Dueling malls: RiverTown, Woodland square off: Western Michigan shoppers get more choices". The Detroit News. 1999-08-08. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ "Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust Acquires Woodland Mall in Grand Rapids, Michigan". Business Wire. 2006-01-03. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ Brubaker, Jim (2008-10-07). "Two relocations facilitated by Transwestern". REJournals.com. Retrieved 2008-10-10. [dead link ]
- ^ http://www.mlive.com/business/west-michigan/index.ssf/2013/03/why_hm_opening_first_grand_rap.html