Misplaced Pages

The Mall at Whitney Field

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Shopping mall
Mall at Whitney Field
Address100 Commercial Road
Leominster, Massachusetts
Opening date1967
DeveloperKimco Realty
OwnerHull Property Group
No. of stores and services75
No. of anchor tenants4 (3 open, 1 vacant)
Total retail floor area744,107 sq ft (69,129.8 m)
No. of floors1 (closed 2nd floor in Gardner Outlet Furniture)
Websitethemallatwhitneyfield.com

The Mall at Whitney Field (formerly known as Searstown Mall) is a shopping mall located off of Route 2 near the junction with Interstate 190 in Leominster, Massachusetts. The mall opened in 1967 and was renovated and renamed in 2004. The mall's anchor stores are Burlington, Gardner Outlet Furniture, and JCPenney, with one vacant anchor last occupied by Sears. The mall was previously owned by Walton Street Capital LLC of Chicago until May 2013 when Vintage Real Estate acquired the mall with plans to renovate and turnaround the struggling mall. As of January 8, 2020, the mall is now owned by Hull Property Group.

History

The mall's food court as of 2014

The Mall at Whitney Field opened in 1967 as the "Searstown Mall". The mall originally opened with Sears, R. H. White, and Bradlees as anchors. A DeMoulas Supermarket (now known as Market Basket) was next to Bradlees with an outside entrance but has since moved to an outlet nearby. The former location was eventually converted to a Toys "R" Us. The mall was expanded substantially in the 1980s, adding a long wing created from the closed R. H. White building which led to a new JCPenney store. In 1992, Sage-Allen closed their store at the mall and was replaced by a Service Merchandise store.

In 1999, Service Merchandise closed their store and the long side wing leading to it was emptied out. The following year, the mall big-boxed the wing, turning much of it into an Old Navy store along with replacing Service Merchandise with a Circuit City store. After the departure of Bradlees in 2001, the store's former lot remained vacant until its demolition in 2002, with the former mall entrance being repurposed as an outdoor entrance. In that same year, Filene's opened a large two-level store at the mall, one entrance down from the former Bradlees store.

In an attempt to attract customers from the Interstate 495 region, the mall underwent significant renovations, renaming itself to 'The Mall at Whitney Field.' In 2007, the mall was sold for $82 million to Walton Street Capital LLC of Chicago with Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL) continuing as the mall's manager. Circuit City was later closed and replaced with Ultimate Electronics in 2010, although the chain soon went out of business the following year. Steve & Barry's became Jo-Ann Fabrics that same year.

In 2013, the mall was sold once again, this time to California-based Vintage Real Estate for an undisclosed price. Vintage Real Estate bought the center with plans to renovate and turnaround the struggling mall. They also took over management from JLL, although the firm returned to manage the mall in 2018. Immediately after Vintage Real Estate acquired the mall, they announced the signing of a ten-year lease with Burlington Coat Factory to occupy the former Circuit City space that had been vacant for years. Old Navy, which used to only have an exterior entrance, moved into a vacant space inside the mall in order to accommodate the addition of Burlington. The new store opened in 2014 and has both interior and exterior entrances.

Recent years have seen the Mall at Whitney Field struggle to attract customers. On March 14, 2018, Toys "R" Us announced that they would be closing all 800 locations in the U.S. due to bankruptcy, among them the store in Whitney Field. The store closed later that year, being replaced by Gardner Outlet Furniture on February 10, 2019. On November 7, 2019, founding anchor store Sears announced a plan to close 96 stores nationwide, shutting its doors the following February. Fellow anchor store Macy's also announced in January 2020 that it would close its store in the mall, closing April of that same year. This left Burlington and JCPenney as the only anchors left. That same June, the Chuck E. Cheese location closed permanently after 15 years of operation since 2005.

On January 8, 2020, the mall was sold once again, this time to Hull Property Group. In an attempt to revive the dying mall, renovations were made to establish the mall as a focal point of the region. In 2022, Gardner Outlet Furniture relocated into the first floor of the former Macy's space, and Launch Entertainment opened in the former Gardner Outlet Furniture space in 2023.

References

  1. Tama J. Shor (1996). Directory of Major Malls, 1996. pp. 24, 448.
  2. Chris Reidy (May 30, 2013). "Calif. firm buys the Mall at Whitney Field, signs up Burlington Coat Factory as a new tenant". Boston.com. Archived from the original on June 2, 2013.
  3. "Leominster's Mall at Whitney Field was sold for $16 million on Christmas Eve to Georgia retail real estate company". 8 January 2020.
  4. Caldor (November 2, 2006). "The Mall at Whitney Field (Searstown Mall); Leominster, Massachusetts". Labelscar The Retail History Blog.
  5. Hill, Mary Jo (2007). "Leominster mall sold for $82M; Chicago company buys Mall at Whitney Field". Retrieved 2013-06-03.
  6. Jack Minch (March 20, 2010). "Ultimate Electronics opens at The Mall at Whitney Field". Settlement & Enterprise.
  7. "Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft Store". Leominster Champion. May 14, 2010.
  8. Minch, Jack (2013-05-31). "The Mall at Whitney Field sold to Vintage Real Estate". Sentinel and Enterprise. Retrieved 2013-06-03.
  9. Reidy, Chris (2013-05-30). "Vintage Real Estate signs ten-year lease with Burlington Coat Factory". Boston.com. Archived from the original on June 2, 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-03.
  10. Reidy, Chris (2013-05-30). "Burlington Coat Factory to open Leominster store". Boston.com. Retrieved 2013-06-03.
  11. Chris Isidore; Jackie Wattles; Parija Kavilanz (March 15, 2018). "Toys 'R' Us will close or sell all US stores". CNNMoney.
  12. "Sears is closing 96 more stores, leaving only 182 stores left in the US. Here's the full list of the ones closing". Business Insider.
  13. "Leominster Macy's set to close". 7 January 2020.
  14. "Chuck e. Cheese parent company to close 34 locations permanently: Is your location on the store closings list?". USA Today.
  15. "Leominster's Mall at Whitney Field was sold for $16 million on Christmas Eve to Georgia retail real estate company". 8 January 2020.
  16. "Leominster mall revitalization underway, drawing new tenants including entertainment center". 29 July 2022.

External links

42°31′48.6″N 71°44′33.3″W / 42.530167°N 71.742583°W / 42.530167; -71.742583

Shopping malls in Massachusetts
Barnstable County
Bristol County
Essex County
Hampden County
Hampshire County
Middlesex County
Norfolk County
Plymouth County
Suffolk County
Worcester County
Defunct
Hull Property Group
Categories: