Floorinf Store in Fashion Square Mall

Shopping mall in Florida, U.s.

Orlando Way Foursquare
Orlando Fashion Square Orlando, FL April 2017 (34592325886).jpg

Entrance to Orlando Fashion Foursquare, Apr 2017

Location Orlando, Florida, United States
Coordinates 28°33′13″N 81°xx′27″W  /  28.553523°N 81.34093°Due west  / 28.553523; -81.34093 Coordinates: 28°33′13″N 81°20′27″W  /  28.553523°N 81.34093°W  / 28.553523; -81.34093
Opening appointment July 30, 1973; 48 years ago  (July thirty, 1973) [one]
Developer Leonard L. Farber
Owner UP Development, Inc.
No. of stores and services 79
No. of anchor tenants 4 (3 open, 1 vacant)
Total retail flooring area 1,085,651 square feet (101,000 m2)[1]
No. of floors 1 with fractional upper level (2 in Dillard's, Macy's, and erstwhile JCPenney, 2nd floor airtight off in Dillard's)
Public transit access Local Transit Lynx 13, 28, 29, 104
Website orlandofashionsquare.com

Orlando Fashion Square is a divide one-story, two-story indoor shopping mall located in Orlando, Florida. Opened in 1973, it features 79 stores in over one million foursquare feet of shop space. The mall's ballast stores are Macy's, Floor & Decor, and Dillard's Clearance Center. Predating the mall's opening was a Sears department store opened in 1963; this store closed in 2016 and has been raised for redevelopment. JCPenney, some other ballast store closed in 2020. Other major tenants include Premiere Cinemas, a food court, and Planet Fitness. The mall is managed by Up Evolution, Inc.

History [edit]

The first operational store on the site was a 173,000-square-foot (16,100 1000two) Sears department store, which opened for business in late 1963.[2] The mall was first announced in 1971 by developer Leonard 50. Farber, who also developed Pompano Foursquare (at present Pompano Citi Center) in Pompano Embankment, Florida. Nether the original plans, the mall would be attached to the existing Sears shop, with Burdines as the second anchor.[iii] [four]

A free-standing picture palace was built on an outparcel in 1975 which existed until 1989. In 1988, J. Westward. Robinson'southward became Maison Blanche, who so built a new shop backside the original ii years later. The previous shop would get more inline mall space connecting the new store with the rest of the mall. Maison Blanche became Gayfer's in 1992, which was then sold to Dillard's in 1998. JCPenney built a new store at the mall to replace a shop at Wintertime Park Mall in 1993. An interior renovation completed in 2002. In 2004, a new movie theatre owned by Premiere Cinemas opened in the mall. Burdines became Macy's in 2005.

In 2013, PREIT sold the mall to UP Evolution, Inc. for $35 million. The new owner has plans to redevelop the mall.[five] 1 year after a new bowling alley was added and the motion picture theater was rebuilt.

In 2014, Dillard's converted its store to a Dillard'due south Clearance Center, and closed its second floor.[6] The mall lost several other stores such as Bath and Trunk Works, Victoria's Secret, and The Limited.

In 2015, Sears Holdings spun off 235 of its properties, including the Sears at Orlando Way Square, into Seritage Growth Backdrop.[7]

On August 9, 2016, Sears appear their intentions to shut their store at this mall. The Sears store was demolished in Apr 2017. Floor & Decor was built to supercede Sears.[8] Outparcels on the Seritage site include Longhorn Steakhouse, Mission BBQ, and Olive Garden.

On June four, 2020, JCPenney appear that it would exist closing as part of a plan to close 154 stores nationwide. The store closed on October xviii, 2020.[9]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Orlando Way Square Fact Sheet" (PDF). PREIT. Retrieved 2010-10-17 .
  2. ^ "Orlando Sears store opens Wednesday". The Orlando Lookout man. October 30, 1963. p. 4C. Retrieved September v, 2018.
  3. ^ "$30 one thousand thousand centre for shops coming". The Orlando Lookout man. September 28, 1971. p. 7C. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  4. ^ Williams, Andy (July 29, 1973). "Farber'due south foresight paying dividends". The Orlando Sentinel. p. 31E. Retrieved September v, 2018.
  5. ^ "OrlandoFashionSquare'sPriceTag:$35M=Orlando Concern Journal". February 13, 2013. Retrieved Feb 13, 2013.
  6. ^ Jacobson, Susan (viii August 2014). "Dillard's at Orlando Mode Square to become 1-story clearance store". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  7. ^ "At Orlando Fashion Square | Seritage".
  8. ^ Carchidi, Jim (18 May 2017). "Sears demolition underway at Orlando Fashion Square mall". Orlando Business Periodical. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  9. ^ "JCPenney Shop Closings – Penney IP LLC".

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

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