Military Circle Mall
Location | Norfolk, Virginia |
---|---|
Address | 880 N. Military Hwy. |
Opening date | 1970 |
Developer | Harvey Lindsay Jr. |
Management | The Woodmont Company |
Owner | Torchlight Investors |
No. of stores and services | 68 |
No. of anchor tenants | 4 (3 vacant) |
Total retail floor area | 963,000 square feet (GLA)[1] |
No. of floors | 1 |
Website | http://shopmilitarycirclemall.com/ |
Military Circle Mall, known as The Gallery at Military Circle Mall from 2002 to 2015, is an enclosed shopping mall in Norfolk, Virginia. Opened in 1970, it lost three anchors in the 2010s: Sears, JCPenney, and Macy's. It now features Ross Dress for Less and a Cinemark multiplex movie theater.[2] In October 2016 the Virginia Beach City Council rejected plans for an oceanfront arena. This vote triggered discussions for the Military Circle area to include the construction of a 20,000 seat multi purpose arena.
History
Military Circle Mall opened in 1970, developed by Harvey Lindsay Jr.[3] Original tenants included J.B. Hunter (later Thalhimers), JCPenney, Smith & Welton, and Leggett (a division of Belk), a Sheraton hotel,[4] and a 6-screen AMC Theatres multiplex.[5] Thalhimer's became Hecht's in 1992,[6] and Macy's in 2006. Smith & Welton closed in 1990.[7] Renovations in 1996 included the addition of skylights in the concourses, new entrances and a 600-seat food court.[8] AMC Theaters, located in the middle of the mall, closed in the mid-90s; a Cinemark multiplex opened a few years later in a different section of the mall.[5]
In 1998, Belk vacated the former Leggett building. A year later, then-owner Urban Retail began a renovation of the center, which included the addition of a Sears in the former Smith & Welton space, returning Sears to Norfolk after its previous store in the city closed in 1993.[9] In 2000, an 18-screen Cinemark movie theater also opened on the site of the former Leggett/Belk.[10][11] Thor Equities bought the mall in 2002[12] and renamed it The Gallery at Military Circle while continuing mall-wide renovation.[3] Ross Dress for Less opened in 2004, taking space previously occupied by a McCrory dime store.[13] A DoubleTree hotel, which had taken the former space of the Sheraton, closed about 2009 and has not reopened.[14] KB Toys filed for bankruptcy and closed in 2009, followed soon by the closing of Suncoast, and Waldenbooks stores.[15]
Sears closed its Military Circle store in March 2012 as part of a nationwide series of closings.[9] The JCPenney store at Military Circle was named as one of 33 stores JCPenney announced on January 15, 2014 would close later in the year.[16] The Norfolk Economic Development Authority then bought the vacated anchor that December so the city would have a strategic say in the future of the mall property.[17] The Macy's store closed in early 2016.[18]
On April 16, 2015; it was announced that the entire Gallery at Military Circle property was placed under foreclosure.[19] On July 15, 2015, the entire mall property was put up for public auction in the Norfolk court.[20] [21] However, the mall did not change hands. On January 7, 2016; Macy's announced they were closing the Gallery at Military Circle location and many other locations as part of a massive restructuring;[22] one of three in the Hampton Roads region and one of 40 overall scheduled to close in early 2016.
Torchlight has hired The Woodmont Company to manage the mall with the intention of rehabilitating it and keeping it active. The mall at this time remains operational albeit with only the Cinemark theater as an active anchor.[23]
References
- ↑ "Military Circle Norfolk VA 23502 US - Thor Equities".
- ↑ Store Directory for Mall
- 1 2 Virginian-Pilot. "The Virginian-Pilot Archives".
- ↑ Spalding, Christopher (24 May 2013). "The Mallmanac: Extant Assets - The Gallery at Military Circle, Norfolk, VA".
- 1 2 "AMC Circle 6 in Norfolk, VA - Cinema Treasures".
- ↑ "Thalhimers Tradition Ends".
- ↑ Virginian-Pilot. "The Virginian-Pilot Archives".
- ↑ Virginian-Pilot. "The Virginian-Pilot Archives".
- 1 2 "Sears closing raises concern of vitality of Military Circle".
- ↑ "Cinemark 18 in Norfolk, VA - Cinema Treasures".
- ↑ Virginian-Pilot. "The Virginian-Pilot Archives".
- ↑ "Cloudy forecast at Gallery at Military Circle".
- ↑ Virginian-Pilot. "The Virginian-Pilot Archives".
- ↑ "Closed Doubletree hotel in Norfolk is purchased".
- ↑ "Military Circle Mall in Norfolk, VA — MallHistory.com".
- ↑ Russolillo, Steven. "Here's the List of the 33 Stores J.C. Penney Is Closing".
- ↑ Kleiner, Sarah (2014-12-19). "Development authority buys J.C. Penney building". The Virginian-Pilot. Norfolk, VA.
- ↑ "Macy's to close three stores in Hampton Roads". WTKR TV.
- ↑ Horne, Chris (17 April 2015). "Military Circle Mall shoppers, merchants wonder what's next".
- ↑ "The Gallery at Military Circle is headed for auction". Inside Business: The Hampton Roads Business Journal. Norfolk, VA. 2015-06-26.
- ↑ "Legal Notice: Trustee's Sale". Inside Business: The Hampton Roads Business Journal. Norfolk, VA. 2015-06-29.
- ↑ Virginian-Pilot, Mike Connors, Margaret Matray and Katherine Hafner The. "Macy's at Chesapeake Square, Military Circle to close".
- ↑ "The mall scene in Norfolk is changing". Inside Business: The Hampton Roads Business Journal. Norfolk, VA. 2016-01-15.
External links
Coordinates: 36°51′07″N 76°12′22″W / 36.852°N 76.206°W