Shops of Grand Avenue

Shops of Grand Avenue

Inside the Shops of Grand Avenue
Location Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
Opening date 1982
Management Mid-America Real Estate Group
Total retail floor area 367,968 square feet (34,185.3 m2) [1]
Website http://www.grandavenueshops.com/

The Shops of Grand Avenue (colloquially referred to as "Grand Avenue" or simply "The Grand") is an urban shopping plaza that spans three city blocks in the downtown neighborhood of Westown in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

The Shops of Grand Avenue is the only major indoor shopping facility in the city of Milwaukee proper with the closing of Capitol Court, Southgate Mall and Northridge Mall in recent years due to competition from newly renovated malls in nearby suburbs.

History

It opened in 1982 and hosted over 80 specialty stores, along with the largest food court in Wisconsin.[2]

The shopping center was named after a bustling merchant street during the 19th century, Grand Avenue (present day Wisconsin Avenue). A main portion of The Grand encompasses the former Plankinton Arcade with many of its original features still intact including the statue of John Plankinton in the center of the circular atrium. The Arcade replaced the Plankinton House Hotel on the same site.

The Grand was opened during a time when many downtown retail centers in major cities were shutting down. It has avoided these problems by relying on locally owned shops that cater to the "urban" tastes of the nearby populace, in addition to the national chain-stores it houses such as T.J. Maxx and its anchor Boston Store. Because of limited street/surface parking, an adjacent south ramp provides hourly fee parking, costs heavily offset by mall purchase validation.

At one time, the mall also featured Marshall Field's (Gimbels until 1986) on the east edge of the mall, but the location closed in 1997. The building that housed it, now ASQ Center, is still connected to Grand Avenue by a skywalk and features a Residence Inn, although it is not technically part of The Shops of Grand Avenue. With the east addition of the downtown YMCA, their circling walking track has views down to Grand Plankinton Concourse thru skylights.

TJ Maxx and Linens 'n Things were added in 2002.[3]

Due to the economic downfall and its impact on the Milwaukee metropolitan area, the mall has lost many tenants. This has led to local speculation regarding the mall's demise or potential renovation should the mall eventually find interested investors.[4] In May 2014 it was announced that the property would be put up for auction with a starting bid price of $4.75 million.[5]

References

Coordinates: 43°02′20″N 87°54′51″W / 43.038764°N 87.914168°W / 43.038764; -87.914168

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.