Sawgrass Mills

Sawgrass Mills
Location Sunrise, Florida, United States
Opening date 1990
Developer Simon Property Group
Owner Simon Property Group
Architect Arquitectonica
No. of stores and services 300+
No. of anchor tenants 10
Total retail floor area 2,383,906 square feet (221,472.1 m2)[1] ranked 7th
No. of floors 1 (2 in Brandsmart USA and parking garage)
Website sawgrassmills.com

Sawgrass Mills is an outlet shopping mall operated by the Simon Property Group, in Sunrise, Florida, a city in Broward County. With 2,383,906 square feet (221,472.1 m2) of retail selling space,[1] it is the tenth largest mall in the United States, the largest single story and outlet mall in the U.S., the largest shopping mall in Broward County, the second largest mall in Florida and Miami Metropolitan Area, and the third largest shopping mall in the southeastern United States. The mall opened in 1990 as the third mall developed by the now-defunct Mills Corporation (now part of Simon Property Group), and has been expanded four times since then, most recently in 2013. There are over 300 retail outlets and name brand discounters, with anchors including Off 5th Saks Fifth Avenue, and Super Target.

Because of its size, Sawgrass Mills is divided into three parts: the main mall with four main "Avenue" sections and a "Fashion Avenue" subsection; "The Oasis at Sawgrass Mills", an outdoor component opened in 1999 including GameWorks which is now GameRoom, Regal Cinemas, Ron Jon Surf Shop, Nordstrom Rack, The Cheesecake Factory, California Pizza Kitchen, Texas de Brazil, and Yard House. "The Colonnade Outlets at Sawgrass Mills" was opened in 2006 as an upscale lifestyle area with shops and restaurants, anchored by Last Call By Neiman Marcus. Additionally, there are numerous "outparcel" stores and plazas.

History

The Phase I mall was dedicated in two stages. The first opened October 4, 1990 with the BrandSmart USA/Sears Outlet wing at the eastern end, extending past the Garden Food Court (next to Bealls, previously the Hurricane Food Court), to the Books-A-Million store at the western end of the mall. A second stage, dedicated November 15, 1990, extended the mall westward of the Books-A-Million store, past the second food court, the Market Food Court (next to The Sports Authority, previously the Sports Food Court) to the Marshalls/Spiegel Outlet (now Neiman Marcus Last Call Clearance Center) wing. Cobb Theatres (became Regal Cinemas in 1997) built an 18-screen cinema located at the Northeast corner of the mall, opening in December 1991.[2] A Target Greatland was added to the East Wing of the mall, opening in March 1992. It was expanded into a SuperTarget-format store in mid-2006. Phar-Mor was another early anchor to the mall.[3]

A Phase II addition, known as Veranda Main Street, opened November 14, 1995. It ran parallel to the middle mall corridor and contained T.J. Maxx, Service Merchandise and the first location of Last Call From Neiman Marcus. This section is currently anchored by T.J. Maxx (in the old Service Merchandise/American Signature Home space). This expansion was followed by The Oasis extension, opened April 15, 1999. It brought the mall out from near Burlington Coat Factory to Regal Cinemas (which was expanded to 23 screens). A parking garage was added in 2002 directly across the outside entrance to Burlington Coat Factory.

The Colonnade Outlets at Sawgrass Mills expansion opened in 2006. It was an outdoor expansion featuring outlets of more upscale brands such as St. John, Burberry, Coach, Barneys New York, Michael Kors, Ralph Lauren, Kate Spade, and Tommy Bahama and restaurants such as Grand Lux Cafe, P.F. Changs, Villagio, and Zinburger. The Colonnade Outlets had expansions completed in 2009 and 2017 with the latest expansion featuring Tory Burch, John Varvartos, Giorgio Armani, Versace, Ted Baker, and Florida's first Matchbox restaurant.[4] A new parking garage opened next to the Colonnade Outlets in 2016 to accomodate more mall visitors.

Originally, the concourses had names and each turn was considered a rotunda or court and named for the style of stores it contained. The original mall concourses (running west to east) were Modern Main Street, Mediterranean Main Street, Art Deco Main Street and Caribbean Main Street. The courts were (running west to east) Entertainment Court, Cabana Court, Video Court, Rotunda Court and New Ideas Court. This proved harder to keep in effect as anchors and internal stores changed. Later, Mall Entrances were named after the parking lot areas, i.e., Yellow Toucan, Green Toad, Purple Parrot, White Seahorse, Red Snapper, Blue Dolphin, Pink Flamingo and New Ideas Court. In the mid-2000s, inspired by rival Dolphin Mall in Miami, the mall transitioned into the current "Avenues" sections.

There was a kid's animatronic display in the Cabana Court, between Books-A-Million and the Rainforest Cafe, featuring singing flamingos and alligators welcoming the public to Sawgrass Mills. It was set up like a swamp and allowed people to toss coins into the shallow water which were donated to local charities. It was later converted to a waiting area designed after a ship, still with alligators, and then into the current Cha Cha's playground.

Local retailer L. Luria & Sons was slated to open an anchor at Sawgrass Mills.[3] A lawsuit ensued when catalog showroom chain Service Merchandise opened instead, as the Luria company blamed Mills Corporation for choosing Service Merchandise instead.[5]

An expansion is scheduled to open in 2018 called the "Town Center at Sawgrass" which will feature 25 full-price retailers, 4 new sit down restaurants, and another new parking garage for 2,000 vehicles. The new expansion will be situated next to the recently expanded Colonnade Outlets and will act as an extension to the Colonnade Outlets.[6]

Anchors

Store Opened Previous stores Notes
Bed Bath and Beyond
Bloomingdale's The Outlet Store 2010
Burlington Coat Factory
Century 21 Department Store 2016 VF Outlet (until 2015)
Marshalls 1990
Last Call by Neiman Marcus 1995
Nordstrom Rack
Saks Fifth Avenue Off 5th
Super Target 2006 Target Greatland (1992–2006)
T.J. Maxx 1995 (old), 2017 (new) American Signature Home (until 2016) Moved to former American Signature Furniture location in 2017, with the old store becoming H&M
H&M 2017 TJ Maxx (1995-2017)

See also

References

Coordinates: 26°09′05″N 80°19′15″W / 26.151353°N 80.320778°W / 26.151353; -80.320778

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