Mayagüez Mall
Location | Mayagüez, Puerto Rico,Hormigueros, Puerto Rico |
---|---|
Address | 975 Hostos Ave. Mayagüez, PR 00680 |
Opening date | 4 October 1972 |
Developer | Empresas Puertorriqueñas de Desarrollo, Inc. |
Owner | Empresas Villamil |
No. of stores and services | 120 |
No. ofanchor tenants | 11 |
Total retail floor area | 1,050,000 sq ft (97,500 m2) |
No. of floors | 1 |
Parking | 6,000 |
Website | mayaguezmall |
1 heliport |
Mayagüez Mallis ashopping malllocated in the municipalities ofMayagüezandHormigueros.It is the third largest shopping center inPuerto Ricowith a total of 1,050,000 square feet (98,000 m2)[1]of retail space, and it is the main shopping center in western Puerto Rico. Its main stores includeWalmart,JCPenney,[2]Shoe Carnival,Old Navy,Marshalls,Tiendas CapriandOffice Max.
There is also aheliportwithin the mall property. The mall is made up of three concourses which connect at a central atrium.
History
[edit]Opening and success: 1970s
[edit]In October 1970, a $6.5 million permanent mortgage was arranged by the Miami office of Friedman-Drew Corp. on the Mayaguez Mall. The mall was planned to be on a 38-acre tract and would have 300,000 square feet of building area including an enclosed air conditioned mall, parking for 2,000 cars would also be provided. The loan was for 27 years, lender being a New York State savings bank.[3]
On October 3, 1972, Tiendas Capri would celebrate inaugurating at the Mayaguez Mall.[4]
On October 4, 1972, at a cost of $12 million, being developed and administrated by Empresas Puertorriqueñas de Desarrollo Inc. a local firm represented by its president at the time Joaquín A. Villamil. Mayaguez Mall officially inaugurated with 60 establishments, of which included anchorsSears,González Padín,Woolworth,and aNew York Department Stores.It also had a cinema Mayaguez Theaters, two banks, and cafeterias which served as food options. From very early in the morning, traffic to the place began to be almost paralyzed by people who wanted to witness the inauguration ceremonies and who arrived from different towns in the Western Area. The symbolic ribbon cutting was carried out by the Mayor of the city ofMayagüez,Bejjamin Cole and Mrs. Sara de Villamil, wife of Mr. Joaquín Villamil, president of Empresas Puertorriqueñas de Desarrollo, Inc. After the ribbon cutting, thousands of visitors spread out through all the sectors, visibly amazed by the spaciousness and beauty of the floors, walls and decoration of the shops, as well as what was offered there in. An aspect that gained the attention of almost the entire public was the beautiful fountain that constantly changed its way of throwing water into the air. During this opening week the mall had a series of recreational and cultural events which included different artistic groups of the island. Of the 60 established businesses included:Pueblo Supermarkets,Globus, Cinefoto, Jet Party, Cabrer, Carmen Chirinos, Light Center,Burger King,Almacenes Rodríguez, La Esquina Famosa,Foxmoor,Bakers Shoes, Agencias Soler, Chess king, Sultana Sport Shop,Walgreens,San Juan Loan Co., Naveira, Centro de Belleza Rita, United Federal Savings,Western Auto,Cristina's, Chantilly,Lerner Shops,Kinney Shoes,Arias, among many others. And as it was informedSears,which was one of the first stores to open at the mall serving as an anchor had record breaking sales which beat previous records at the time.[5][6] On October 27, 1972,González Padínwould officially inaugurate their store at the Mayaguez Mall, serving as a junior anchor in theSearswing of the mall.[7]
On November 1, 1972,New York Department Storeswould officially inaugurate their store at the Mayaguez Mall, serving as a junior anchor in theWoolworthwing of the mall.[8]
On November 15, 1972, opening as the seventh establishment on the island,Walgreenswould officially inaugurate at the Mayaguez Mall. This would be the 609th store in the entire Walgreens chain. The new facilities were located in an area of 10,000 square feet of space in the shopping mall, and included a cafeteria called "The Grille." The facilities had a service of cosmetics, pharmaceutical products, electronic effects, and other departments. The front of the store faced the central promenade of the shopping complex, being located in theSearswing of the mall.[9][10]
In March 1977, with the mall having sales of $46 million the previous year, plans for the mall to expand were announced. This would include expanding the north of the mall approximately 6,000 square meters that would add to the already 625 that were in use by the 60 establishments at the mall, active negotiations were also undergoing to bring establishments such as Mr. Donuts,JCPenney,Kentucky Fried Chicken,andPizza Hutto the mall.[11]
In February 1978,Pizza Hutopened a location on the premises of the mall, being the chains 5th location on the island at the time.[12]
In October 1978, a new Gittys Toys store would open at the Mayaguez Mall.[13]
In December 1979, the firstB. Dalton Booksellersstore inMayaguezopened at the mall.[14]
1990s-2000s
[edit]On April 4, 1990, it was reported that the supermarket chainPueblo Xtra,with an investment of nearly $7 million, would be opening its doors in the Mayaguez Mall that following June, supplying the area with 300 new jobs. In the 50,000 square feet of the supermarket, it was projected to sell a volume of $600,000 a week, for a total of $31.2 million annually. In addition, aChurch's Fried Chickenwas also reported to open at the mall.[15]
During 1990 up to late 1991, the mall underwent extensive renovations, including the construction of its third and largest concourse anchored byJCPenney.In addition,Walmartwould go on to open a 110,000 square-foot store at the mall in late 1991, approximately creating 240 jobs for area residents.[16]
In October 1995,González Padínwhich co-anchored theSearsconcourse closed when the chain ceased operations.[17]Its former space was occupied later on bySears Brand Central.
In 2008, anOld Navystore opened at the mall in theJCPenneyconcourse.[18]
The formerCineVista Theatresbuilding shuttered with the rest of the chain in November 2008 and was demolished by 2010. Later on being replaced by aRomano's Macaroni Grill.
2010s, and on
[edit]In 2011, theBorders Book Storestore at the mall closed with the chains bankruptcy. The store had originally opened in 2005.[19]
On June 2, 2020, after being closed for some time during theCOVID-19 pandemic,the mall reopened.[20]
In December 2020, it was announced thatSearswould be closing as part of a plan to close 23 stores nationwide. Both the main Sears store and Sears Brand Central closed in February 2021.[21]
On May 26, 2023, it was reported that with the 50th anniversary of the mall new things were coming, it would be adding new tenants, while beginning remodeling roofs, lighting, and exterior paint changes in those coming weeks. Of these new tenants includedForever 21,H&M,Fit2Run, and Tijuana’s, among others.[22]
Current anchors
[edit]- Walmart
- Old Navy
- JCPenney
- Shoe Carnival
- Tiendas Capri
- Office Max(no indoor connection to the mall)
- Summit Trampoline Park(no indoor connection to the mall)
Outparcels
[edit]- Romano's Macaroni Grill
- Chili's Grill & Bar
- Pizza Hut
- Tijuanas Bar & Grill
- Krispy Kreme
- Burger King
- KFC
- Church's Chicken
- Pollo Tropical
- Wendy's
- Puma Energy
- Pueblo Supermarkets
Former anchors
[edit]- Sears
- Woolworth
- González Padín
- New York Department Stores
- Borders Bookstores
- CineVista Theatres(outparcel)
- Ponderosa Steakhouse(outparcel)
Gallery
[edit]-
JCPenney's concourse
-
Mall's helipad
References
[edit]- ^"Empresas Puertorriqueñas de Desarrollo, Inc. v. Hermandad Independiente de Empleados Telefónicos, 150 D.P.R. 924 (2000). – Biblioteca PopJuris".www.popjuris.com.
- ^"JCPenney to Donate Up to 55,000 Units of Merchandise to Puerto Ricans Impacted by Hurricane Fiona".Business Wire.25 October 2022.Retrieved29 May2023.
- ^"Mayaguez Mall".The Miami Herald.1970-10-25. p. 169.Retrieved2023-08-02.
- ^"El Mundo 1972.10.03 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-10-17.
- ^"Hoy, El Mayagüez Mall".El Nuevo Día.4 October 1972. p. 4.
- ^"El Mundo 1972.10.05 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-10-17.
- ^"El Mundo 1972.10.26 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-10-17.
- ^"El Mundo 1972.11.01 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-10-17.
- ^"El Mundo 1972.11.15 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-10-17.
- ^"El Mundo 1972.11.29 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-10-17.
- ^"El Mundo 1977.03.13 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-08-02.
- ^"El Mundo 1978.02.26 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-08-02.
- ^"El Mundo 1978.10.08 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-09-25.
- ^"El Mundo 1979.12.30 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2023-10-17.
- ^"El Mundo 1990.04.04 — Archivo digital de El Mundo".gpa.eastview.com.Retrieved2024-01-14.
- ^"Wal-Mart & Sam's Club open in Puerto Rico".Baxter Bulletin.1991-01-31. p. 6.Retrieved2022-06-27.
- ^"Gonzalez Padin Closes".El Nuevo Herald.1995-10-31. p. 12.Retrieved2022-06-27.
- ^"Old Navy comes to Mayagüez Mall!".Nick and Miri's PR Prattle.2008-03-27.Retrieved2023-08-02.
- ^"El Encuevao: Apocalipsis del letrado occidental".El Encuevao.2011-02-20.Retrieved2023-08-02.
- ^"Mayagüez Mall Ready to Reopen as Business Restrictions Loosen".The Weekly Journal.28 May 2020.Retrieved29 May2023.
- ^"Sears and Kmart closing more stores. Is your location closing in 2021? See the updated closure list".USA Today.
- ^"Conoce lo nuevo que llegará al Mayagüez Mall".El Nuevo Día(in Spanish). 2023-05-27.Retrieved2024-05-04.