Florence Mall (Kentucky)

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Coordinates38°59′44.97″N 84°39′0.51″W / 38.9958250°N 84.6501417°W / 38.9958250; -84.6501417
Address2028 Florence Mall
Florence, Kentucky 41042
Opening date1976; 50 years ago (1976)
Florence Mall
View from second floor in center Court.
Center court of Florence Mall
LocationFlorence, Kentucky
Coordinates38°59′44.97″N 84°39′0.51″W / 38.9958250°N 84.6501417°W / 38.9958250; -84.6501417
Address2028 Florence Mall
Florence, Kentucky 41042
Opening date1976; 50 years ago (1976)
DeveloperHomart Development Company
ManagementNamdar Realty Group
OwnerMason Asset Management and Namdar Realty Group
ArchitectHixson, Inc.
Stores and services101
Anchor tenants4 (3 open, 1 vacant)
Floor area963,727 sq ft (89,533 m2)[1]
Floors2
Public transitBus interchange TANK
Websiteflorencemall.com
[2]

Florence Mall is an indoor shopping mall in Florence, Kentucky, United States. Built in 1976 by Homart Development Company, the mall originally featured Sears, Shillito's, Pogue's, and JCPenney as its four anchor stores. The mall features over 100 stores and a food court. Another notable feature of the mall is the Florence Y'all Water Tower on the mall property; this water tower originally bore the mall's name, but was altered prior to the mall's opening. The mall's anchor stores are JCPenney and two locations of Macy's, with the former location of Sears being vacant. Florence Mall is owned and managed by Namdar Realty Group.

A section of stores at Florence Mall
The Macy's wing of Florence Mall in 2019

Florence Mall opened in 1976 on a site along Interstate 75 just south of Kentucky Route 18. The two-story mall was constructed by Homart Development Company, the real estate division of Sears. Hixson, Inc. of Cincinnati was the architect and Charles V. Maescher & Co. also of Cincinnati was general contractor.[3] Sears also served as one of the anchor stores, opening on March 10, 1976.[4] The mall itself opened six months later, with Pogue's serving as the second anchor.[5] Two more anchors, Shillito's and JCPenney, were added in 1977 and 1978, respectively. At the time of opening, the mall had 87 stores.[5] The mall's opening led to the development of several retail stores in Florence, and as a result, the city became a retail hub for northern Kentucky.[6]

While JCPenney remained the same throughout the mall's history, the other three anchor stores changed as chains were acquired, merged or closed. The Shillito's chain was merged with Rike's and all former Shillito's and Rike's stores briefly carried the dual branding of Shillito-Rike's from 1982 until 1986, when the chain was merged into Lazarus. Pogue's was converted to L.S. Ayres in 1983, which in turn sold its store to Hess's five years later. Also in the mid-1980s, the food court was renovated.

Hess's closed in 1993, and one year later, Lazarus moved its home goods into the former Hess's space. During the 1990s, the mall underwent an $8 million renovation, including the addition of 64 new tenants.[7]

In 2003, the mall was acquired by General Growth Properties in partnership with the Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois. General Growth had managed the property for several years prior.[8] Both Lazarus stores were converted to Lazarus-Macy's in 2003, then to just Macy's in 2005. The food court was renovated again in 2004.

On August 22, 2018, it was announced that Sears would be closing in November 2018.[9]

Brookfield Properties sold the mall in 2021 with JLL managing the mall.[10] On June 15, 2022, the mall was sold again to Mason Asset Management and Namdar Realty Group, with Mason overseeing leading efforts and Namdar managing the mall.[11]

Water tower

References

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