Boynton Beach Mall
Boynton Beach Mall is an enclosed shopping mall in Boynton Beach, Florida, that is owned by Washington Prime Group, who assumed ownership of the mall and 97 others after its spinoff from Simon Property Group in 2014. Its tenants include Macy's, Dillard's Clearance Center, JCPenney, Christ Fellowship, Cinemark, and about 135 specialty stores and eateries. It was built by the Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation like Coral Square for which it is similar in layout.
Location | Boynton Beach, Florida United States |
---|---|
Coordinates | 26.535555°N 80.095825°W |
Address | 801 North Congress Avenue |
Opening date | October 10, 1985 |
Developer | Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. |
Management | Washington Prime Group |
Owner | Washington Prime Group (formerly Simon Malls) |
Architect | None |
No. of stores and services | 135+ |
No. of anchor tenants | 6 |
Total retail floor area | 1,101,881 square feet (102,368.1 m2)[1] |
No. of floors | 1 (2 in Christ Fellowship, JCPenney, Macy's, and former Sears, closed 2nd floor in Dillard's Clearance Center) |
Parking | All |
Website | boyntonbeachmall |
History
Originally built by the Edward J. DeBatolo Corp. in October 1985, the mall's original anchors were J. C. Penney (opened October 2), and Lord & Taylor (opened October 7, along with another at Miami International Mall), with the mall itself opening on October 10, 1985, followed by Burdines on November 2.[2] This was followed by Jordan Marsh in 1986, similarly to Coral Square, which was dedicated in 1984. A Macy's was added in 1989.
In the mall's center court, there used to be a fountain with a large monarch butterfly statue atop a waterfall, which fell in short bursts so as to create an unusual sound. The shopping mall also had a running theme with its additional two smaller bronze fountains, one featuring a boy and his dog playing with a garden hose, and at the other end of the mall a girl pouring water out of a bucket into the fountain. The mall was renovated in 2001, and all three fountains were removed, which was likewise done at the same time at Miami International Mall. The statue of the girl still remains at one end of the mall even though it is completely dry. The sculptures were designed by contracted sculpturist Norman Mansson.[3]
Mervyn's replaced Lord & Taylor in 1991 and Sears replaced Jordan Marsh in 1992. Dillard's replaced Mervyn's in 1997 as a men's store and built a women's store in 2002. The dual anchor format was also sone at Pembroke Lakes Mall As Burdines became Macy's in 2005, the original Macy's was also demolished in that year to make way for a new lifestyle center.
On May 4, 2007, Muvico Theaters opened a 14-screen movie theater at the mall's new lifestyle center addition. In March 2009, Muvico sold the theater to Cinemark. Several eateries and stores were also opened on the former site of the mall's original Macy's.
In summer 2010, a new trackless train from Beston opened. Soon afterwards in 2011, Dillard's closed their women's store and converted the men's store into a clearance center. Christ Fellowship purchased the former Dillard's women's building in 2012 and opened in 2014. The train closed in 2015 to make way for Safari Rides. In 2017, The Disney Store closed.
In 2013, Small Fry Carousel was closed to make way for a bungee jumping attraction near the Dillard's clearance center. H&M opened a 15,000-square-foot store in summer 2015.[4][5]
On November 8, 2018, Sears announced that its store at the mall would be closing as part of a plan to shut down 40 locations nationwide. The store closed in February 2019.
Anchors
Current:
- Christ Fellowship (opened in former Dillard's Women's) (2014–Present)
- Macy's (former Burdines location) (2005–Present)
- Macy's Backstage (inside Macy's) (2017–present)
- Dillard's (opened in the former Mervyn's location, became Clearance Center in 2012) (2002–Present)
- J.C. Penney {original tenant} (1985–present)
- Cinemark (opened in 2007 on former Macy's site as Muvico, became Cinemark in 2009)
Former:
- Jordan Marsh {original tenant} (closed in 1991, became Sears in 1992)(1986-1991)
- Mervyn's (opened in former Lord & Taylor in 1991, closed in 1999 became Dillard's Men's)
- Lord & Taylor {original tenant}(closed in 1991, became Mervyns)
- Burdines {original tenant} (became Macy's in 2005) (1985-2005)
- Sears (opened in former Jordan Marsh in 1992, closed in 2019)
- Dillard's (women's store opened 2002, closed 2012, space became Christ Fellowship Boynton Beach campus in 2014) (2002-2012)
- Macy's (Opened in 1991 in new building, demolished when Macy's relocated for former Burdines in 2005, site became Cinemark) (1991-2005)
References
- "WASHINGTON PRIME GROUP". washingtonprime.com. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
- "Clipped From The Palm Beach Post". The Palm Beach Post. 1985-10-10. p. 128. Retrieved 2020-12-18.
- ""Children At Play"". NormanMansson.Blogspot.com. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
- Valverde, Miriam (November 12, 2014). "H&M opening another South Florida store". Sun-Sentinel.com. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
- "Disney Store at Boynton Mall to close". PalmBeachPost.com. Retrieved October 12, 2017.