North Haven Mall

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41°23′28″N 72°52′08″W / 41.391°N 72.869°W / 41.391; -72.869 The North Haven Mall was a shopping mall proposed for construction in North Haven, Connecticut.

A North Haven town meeting authorized sale of land for the mall at $18,000 an acre,[1] for a total of $507,600[2] in 1973.[3] Developer Mall Properties, Inc. of New York began paying the town $2,500 a month in September, 1975 to maintain an option on the land.[4] In addition, in August[3] 1978, Mall Properties began paying $6,000 more per month for engineering fees. This went toward planned geographic changes; a widening of Washington Avenue, extending Valley Service Road over train tracks with a new bridge, connecting North Haven with Wallingford at Toelles Road. Valley Service Road would also be widened from two lanes to six.[1][5]

The overall land area was 117.5 acres (47.6 ha) in size,[6] bounded by the Quinnipiac River on the west, and I-91 on the east.[7] Often singled out for particular mention by the media were 28.2[8] acres between Stillman Road and Quinnipiac River, likely because they were the first land purchased.[3] Aside from the town's sale, there were three other land owners dealt with in private transactions.[1][3]

Features and support

The two-story[9] mall was envisioned as $40 million[1] and 900,000 square feet, and enlarged to $150 million[7] and 1.1 million square feet.[1] At the time, it would have been the largest enclosed mall in the state.[5] Four anchor stores committed, G. Fox & Co., J. C. Penney, Macy's, and Sears.[1] There would also have been a hundred smaller shops.[7] A recreational facility could have been constructed, using land from a pond that would be dredged during development.[5] The Mall would be located on a street named Mall Drive.[10]

The city of North Haven cited the necessity of progress,[11] estimated $2.5 million in possible tax revenue, and the creation of up to 3,000 permanent new jobs.[3][5][7] There would also be the benefit of payrolls of approximately $15 million for local and area construction workers.[3] The mall was given the endorsement of Meriden City Manager Dana Miller, despite an existing mall in Meriden.[12]

Opposition

Aftermath

Footnotes

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