Springfield Mall (Pennsylvania)
Location | Springfield Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. |
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Coordinates | 39°54′54″N 75°21′07″W / 39.915°N 75.352°WCoordinates: 39°54′54″N 75°21′07″W / 39.915°N 75.352°W |
Opening date | 1974[1] |
Management | Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust |
Owner |
Simon Property Group (50%) Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (50%) |
No. of stores and services | 70+ |
No. of anchor tenants | 2 |
Total retail floor area | 589,000 square feet (54,700 m2)[1] |
No. of floors | 2 |
Parking | Lighted Lot |
Public transit access |
SEPTA bus: 107, 109, 110 trolley: Springfield Mall |
Website | http://www.shopspringfieldmall.com |
Springfield Mall is a 589,000-square-foot (54,700 m2) regional shopping mall located approximately 10 miles (16 km) southwest of Philadelphia in Springfield Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. It is located just off of Interstate 476 (the "Blue Route") along Baltimore Pike, near its busy intersection with Pennsylvania Route 320. It is serviced by a number of SEPTA bus lines as well as the mass transit system's Route 101 trolley line at the Springfield Mall station, a rarity for suburban Philadelphia shopping malls, many of which are served solely by bus routes.
Springfield Mall is owned jointly by the Simon Property Group and the Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (each with a 50 percent stake), and is managed by PREIT.
It is currently anchored by a 192,000 sq ft (17,800 m2) Macy's and Target, the latter replacing a 186,000 sq ft (17,300 m2) Strawbridge's anchor store.
Full service dining options include Ruby Tuesday, Carrabba's Italian Grill, and Friendly's. Fast food dining options include Subway, Sbarro, Auntie Anne's Pretzels, Asian Bistro and Tony Lukes.
History
Springfield Mall opened in 1974. Original anchors included Bamberger's and John Wanamaker. The Bambergers was converted to a Macy's in 1986. John Wanamaker closed in 1995 and was reopened as Hecht's the same year. In 1997, the Hecht's was converted to Strawbridge's. In 2005, PREIT and Kravco Simon acquired the Springfield Mall from Springfield Associates LP for $103.5 million.[2] Strawbridge's closed in 2006 following the sale of its parent company to the same parent company as Macy's. The building was sold to Target in 2008 and demolished fall 2008, The new Target was constructed following the Strawbridge's demolition in December 2008 and though 2009 up to the completion in September 2009, The new Target store opened on October 11, 2009 on the same site, coexisting with the nearby Target store opened in 1997 in a former Strawbridge & Clothier, the area's first Target.
1985 shooting spree
On October 30, 1985, Sylvia Seegrist, a 25-year-old paranoid schizophrenic, went on a shooting spree in the mall, killing three and wounding seven others until she was disarmed by other shoppers.[3][4]
Major Stores
Former Stores
- Bamberger's (1974-1986, now Macy's)
- Hecht's (1995-1997, later Strawbridge's)
- Strawbridge's (1997-2006, demolished in fall 2008/rebuilt as Target in December 2008 until September 2009)
- John Wanamaker (1974-1995, then Hecht's)
References
- 1 2 "Springfield Mall Fact Sheet" (PDF). PREIT. Retrieved 2010-10-14.
- ↑ "PREIT and Kravco Simon buy mall". Philadelphia Business Journal. September 19, 2005. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
- ↑ Sylvia Seegrist, guilty of mass murders but insane. - The Crime library
- ↑ Whatever Happened To: Sylvia Seegrist - Local News Story - WCAU | Philadelphia
External links
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