North East Mall
North East Mall back in 1999, in the photo is Montgomery Ward before their demise.
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Location | Hurst, Texas in Tarrant County, U.S. |
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Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Address | 1101 Melbourne Rd, Hurst, Texas 76053 |
Opening date | March 25, 1971 March 25, 1972 (sources differ) |
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Developer | Homart Development Company Simon Property Group |
Management | Melvin Simon and Associates |
Owner | Simon Property Group |
Architect | Omniplan RTKL Associates |
No. of stores and services | 169 |
No. of anchor tenants | 28 |
Total retail floor area | 1,749,000 sq ft (162,500 m2)[1] 2,134,000 sq ft (198,300 m2) (with power center) |
No. of floors | 1 |
North East Mall is a mega-regional enclosed shopping mall located in Hurst, Tarrant County, Texas, United States. In 2012, it was the 47th-largest mall in the United States according to Esri.[2] It is 10 miles (16 km) west of the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport and 10 minutes east of Downtown Fort Worth.
Department stores as of 2007, include Dick's Sporting Goods, a flagship Dillard's, JCPenney, Macy's, Nordstrom and Sears. Adjacent to the mall is the Rave Cinemas with 18 screens and the Shops at North East Mall which include big-box stores such as Barnes & Noble, PetSmart, Michael's, Bed Bath & Beyond, Pier 1 Imports, ULTA Beauty, Old Navy, Lifeway Christian Resources, DSW Shoe Warehouse and Best Buy. The mall is owned by the Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group and the architecture was designed by Omniplan and the RTKL Associates[1][3] who both have operations in Dallas, Texas, which is 26.1 miles (42.0 km) east of the mall. Since 1997, the mall faces competition with Grapevine Mills, its sister mall also owned by Simon, which is located in Grapevine, Texas, a more affluent city than Hurst.
Together, with the Shops at North East Mall power center and the North East Mall, the whole Simon-owned property would encompass a total of 2,134,000 square feet (198,000 m2), surpassing the size of NorthPark Center in Dallas.
Contents
History
1970–98: Beginnings
The center originated with a Leonard's department store, the Fort Worth-based chain's third location. This store was dedicated July 10, 1970. A single level mall of eighty inline stores was added, which officially opened March 25, 1971 or 1972. This included a Fort Worth-based Stripling's (inaugurated March 18, 1971) and J.C. Penney (which commenced operation November 3, 1971). North East Mall now encompassed 750,000 leasable square feet. Sears and Montgomery Ward stores were added, which opened in August 1978. This expansion also added twenty store spaces and the United Artists Cinema 6.
The gross leasable area of the mall now stood at 1,300,000 square feet (120,000 m2), with 106 inline stores. The mall office is located near Sears.[4]
Dillard's bought the Leonard's chain in 1974 and re-branded all stores in 1975. In 1986, they reconfigured their existing North East Mall store as a Dillard's Women's. The vacant Stripling & Cox became a Dillard's Men's. In 1977, Fort Worth's Dunlap's had acquired the W.C. Stripling Company (Stripling's). Another local chain, R.E. Cox and Company (Cox's), was bought in 1981. These chains were merged into Stripling & Cox in 1983, the North East Mall store was later shuttered in January 1986. The existing J.C. Penney had been expanded by 83,000 square feet (7,700 m2) in 1996.
1998–2004: Expansion and power center
In October 1998, a $200 million renovation and expansion of North East Mall succeeded. Plans to open an 385,000 square feet (36,000 m2) Power center adjacent to the Mall known as The Shops at North East Mall came to fruition, it officially opened in October 1999. The Shops at North East Mall opened in October 1999 with store chains including, PetSmart, Just For Feet, Noodle Kidoodle (converted to Zany Brainy in 2000; Zainy Brainy converted to present-day Five Below), Michaels, OfficeMax, Bed, Bath & Beyond, T.J. Maxx, Ulta Beauty, Best Buy (opened later in 2000 after moving from North Richland Hills), Old Navy, and Party City. On May 25, 2000, the very first Nordstrom Rack (36,000 square feet (3,000 m2)) in the state of Texas opened at the power center.[5][6]
At the same time in 1999, Dillard's built a new three-level store, consolidating the two existing locations, which held its grand opening on October 1, 1999[7] as one of its flagship stores.[8] On November 1, 1999, both JCPenney and the first parking structure were both completed.[9] Four parking garages were also constructed as part of the 1998–2001 remodeling. The old Dillard's Women's was partially demolished. A new South Wing was built, containing 28 store spaces. This connected to the new Dillard's and a new Foley's, which was built in part of the old Dillard's spot. The Foley's store was dedicated on October 16, 2001.
The vacant Dillard's Men's, on the west end of the mall, was knocked down and replaced by Nordstrom, which made North East Mall the first mall in Tarrant County to have such an upscale retailer; the store held its official opening on March 22, 2001.
Montgomery Ward had been shuttered in February 2001. There was talk of the store being renovated—and reopened—by upscale chain Lord and Taylor, but that did not come to fruition.[10] Despite the closure of Montgomery Ward, when North East Mall held its official re-dedication on September 15, 2001, the center encompassed 1,749,000 leasable square feet and 168 stores and services. It was then the second-largest enclosed shopping mall in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex and the second-largest in Texas, following The Galleria in Houston.
On the north end of the mall, New York City-based Saks Fifth Avenue built a store, taking some previous mall store space. This location opened for business September 16, 2000. The mall and RTKL Associates was nominated on the 2002 Annual SADI Awards in Nominees by Project. The vacant Montgomery Ward building was torn down in 2003 and replaced with the Rave North East Mall 18 megaplex cinema, dedicated on November 4, 2004.
2006–present: New additions
The Saks Fifth Avenue store closed on September 16, 2006,[11] and was quickly retenanted by Dick's Sporting Goods in October 2007, a few months after their closure.
On May 29, 2013, Rave Cinemas was fully acquired by Plano-based Cinemark Theatres, making the Rave Cinemas convert to a Cinemark Theatres, without changing its nameplate, it remains as a brand of Cinemark.
On January 23, 2014, Dallas Morning News reported that new additions were coming to North East Mall, which were expected to open in spring 2014. An urban bar, Bar Louis, is under construction and is planned to be located nearby the Rave Cinemas and Dillard's. Rue 21 is being added to the Dillard's wing nearby Charming Charlie. Lifeway Christian Resources is building a new store near Ulta and Dillard's at the Shops at North East Mall.[12] On January 27, 2014, CBS 11 DFW reported that the construction on State Highway 183 was decreasing the population of the mall, as well the sales.[13]
On June 30, 2014, it was reported by the Fort Worth Business Press that according to Simon, new additions were coming to the mall, with White House Black Market and Gameday Connexion being added. Yogurtland will be added at the Shops at North East Mall between Starbucks and Smoothie Paradise.[14]
In April 2015, Cinemark Theatres announced that the North East Mall 18 had undergone a complete auditorium remodel and that it would offer guests brand new oversized, plush, electric-powered Luxury Lounger recliners with cup holders and footrests.[15]
The Shops at North East Mall
The Shops at North East Mall is a 385,000 square feet (36,000 m2) Power center adjacent to the North East Mall that opened in 1999. In the beginning, the power center once housed Nordstrom Rack (replaced by Barnes & Noble), Zany Brainy (replaced by Five Below in 2001), OfficeMax (replaced by Shoe Pavilion, now occupied by DSW), and Just For Feet (shuttered in 2004; replaced by Famous Footwear in 2005).
The Power center was built as part of the $200 million 1999 renovations, and was completed in October 1999. The power center as of 2016, is anchored by Best Buy, Zumiez, Designer Shoe Warehouse (DSW), Pier 1 Imports, Barnes & Noble, Starbucks, Hallmark Cards, Smoothie King, Old Navy, Bed, Bath & Beyond, Lifeway Christian Stores, T.J. Maxx, Famous Footwear, Five Below, GameStop, Michaels, BJ's Restaurant & Brewhouse, and PetSmart.
Together, with the Shops at North East Mall power center and the North East Mall, the whole Simon-owned property would encompass a total of 2,134,000 square feet (198,000 m2), surpassing the size of NorthPark Center in Dallas.
Reception
The mall received generally positive reviews receiving 3 stars out of 5 Stars.[16] complementing its high-end stores, but mixed remarks about the Food Court. In 2009, the mall was voted "Best Retailer Mall or Major Retail Center" in Tarrant County by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Anchors
The Mall
- Dick's Sporting Goods (164,000 sq ft (15,200 m2) (in former Saks Fifth Avenue space, opened in 2007, a few months after their closure)
- Dillard's (flagship store) (310,000 sq ft (29,000 m2) (opened in 1999 as Tarrant County's flagship Dillard's store with three floors)[1] [8]
- JCPenney (250,700 sq ft (23,290 m2) (two floors)
- Macy's (232,800 sq ft (21,630 m2) (Three floors)
- Nordstrom (Lua error in Module:Convert at line 272: attempt to index local 'cat' (a nil value). (opened in 2001 with two floors)
- Rave North East Mall 18 (103,000 sq ft (9,600 m2) (opened in November 2004, with eighteen screens)
- Sears (164,100 sq ft (15,250 m2) (opened in 1977 with two floors)[1]
Minor anchors
- Forever 21 (opened September 2011)
- Hollister Co. (opened 2005, a brand of Abercrombie & Fitch)
The Shops at North East Mall
- Best Buy
- Bed Bath & Beyond
- Michael's
- DressBarn
- PetSmart
- Pier 1 Imports
- Barnes & Noble (opened on May 21, 2008)[17]
- Famous Footwear
- Old Navy
- Starbucks
- Ulta
- Zumiez
- DSW Shoe Warehouse
- Lifeway Christian Resources
Former anchors
- Saks Fifth Avenue (opened on September 16, 2001, after 9/11, closed on September 16, 2006)
- Montgomery Ward (178,000 sq ft (16,500 m2) (opened in August 1978, shuttered in February 2001)
- Nordstrom Rack (opened in 2001, shuttered in 2007, replaced by Barnes & Noble in 2008)
- Foley's (opened in October 2001, changed to a Macy's on September 9, 2006)
- Abercrombie & Fitch (shuttered in 2011, in the favor of Forever 21)
- United Artists 6 (opened in 1977–78, closing date uncertain)[1]
- Leonard's (opened on July 10, 1970, sold to Dillard's in 1974)
- Shoe Pavilion (shuttered in 2008, replaced by DSW Shoe Warehouse in 2012)
- Stripling & Cox (opened in 1971, closed in 1986)
- Dillard's Men (opened in January 1986; replaced by Nordstrom on March 22, 2001)
- Dillard's Women (reconstructed into a new Dillard's in 1999)
- G by GUESS (opened in early 2013; closed in mid-2015)
See also
- Galleria Dallas
- Grapevine Mills
- North Hills Mall
- List of shopping malls in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex
References
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