Fairlane Town Center

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Fairlane Town Center
Mall facts and statistics
Location Dearborn, Michigan, USA
Opening date 1976
Developer A. Alfred Taubman
Management Taubman Centers
Owner Taubman Centers
No. of stores and services 180+
No. of anchor tenants 4, plus one vacant
Total retail floor area 1.4 million ft²
Macy's - 240,000 ft²
Sears - 244,000 ft²
JC Penney - 200,000 ft²
Off 5th - 45,000 ft²
former Lord & Taylor - 122,000 ft²
No. of floors 3
Website http://www.shopfairlane.com/

Fairlane Town Center is a shopping mall in Dearborn, Michigan. Its anchor stores are Macy's, JCPenney, Sears and Off 5th. The mall also includes an AMC Theatres multiplex, as well as a Steve & Barry's, DSW Shoe Warehouse and Bally Total Fitness among other major stores. The mall also includes a large food court and several other eateries. The mall also has its own Police Department - the only mall to do so in Michigan - the Fairlane Town Center Police Authority, which operates in conjunction with the Dearborn Police Department.

Contents

[edit] History

Developed by developer A. Alfred Taubman in 1976, Fairlane Town Center was anchored at the time by Hudson's, JCPenney, and Sears. it featured a skating rink, a theatre, as well as an elevated monorail car that shuttled shoppers between Fairlane and the nearby Hyatt Regency Hotel. Lord & Taylor added a store in 1978, and Saks Fifth Avenue followed in 1980. Hudson's adopted the Marshall Field's name in 2001 as the chain was acquired; in 2006, the store was converted to Macy's along with all other Marshall Field's stores in Michigan. Saks closed off much of its store in 2001, using a portion as an Off 5th outlet store. Lord & Taylor closed in 2006. A Star Theatre multiplex was added (now AMC Theatres as of 2006) in the 1990s; the mall's ice skating rink and an older theatre were demolished for the new theatre. In 2005, Media Play was proposed as an anchor, but the chain closed before the store could open. [1]

[edit] Coming Soon

H&M (spring 2007)
Starter's Bar & Grill (fall 2006)
Taco Bell (fall 2006)

[edit] Controversy

Frederick Finley, 32, died after he was assaulted on June 22, 2000 in a parking lot outside the Lord & Taylor department store at the Fairlane Town Center in Dearborn. Finley had come to the defense of his 11-year-old stepdaughter, who was being forcibly detained by five plain clothes Lord & Taylor Loss Prevention officers for allegedly shoplifting a $4 bracelet.

Three guards — two black and one white — threw Finley to the ground, face-first, then handcuffed him while one guard pushed his knee into Finley's neck. The same guard then used a chokehold to restrain Finley. According to an autopsy report, Finley died of asphyxiation due to neck compression.

On July 5, thousands of protesters converged on the Fairlane Town Center to demand the arrest of Finley's attackers. Many carried signs declaring that a human life is worth more than a $4 bracelet. The following day, two weeks after the killing, the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office lodged involuntary manslaughter charges against Dennis Richardson, one of the two black guards involved in the assault. Richardson was identified as the guard who put Finley in a headlock.

[edit] Anchors

[edit] Former anchors


[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:hhmVXwbnhcYJ:atdetroit.net/forum/messages/5/88645.html%3F1165937313+%22fairlane+town+center%22+%22media+play%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=2&client=firefox-a

[edit] External links

Metro Detroit shopping malls

Briarwood Mall • Brighton Mall • Canterbury Village • Eastland Center • Fairlane Town Center • Fountain Walk • Great Lakes CrossingGreen Oak Village PlaceLakeside MallLaurel Park PlaceLivonia Mall • Macomb Mall • The Mall at Partridge CreekNorthland CenterOakland Mall • Pointe Plaza • Renaissance CenterSomerset CollectionSouthland CenterSummit Place Mall • Tower Center • Twelve Oaks MallUniversal Mall • Village of Rochester Hills • Westborn Mall • Westland Center