Woodfield Mall
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| Woodfield Mall | |
| Image:Schaumburg 1.JPG | |
| Facts and statistics | |
|---|---|
| Location | Schaumburg, Illinois, U.S. |
| Opening date | September 9, 1971 |
| Developer | A. Alfred Taubman |
| Management | A. Alfred Taubman |
| No. of stores and services | 300 |
| No. of anchor tenants | 5 |
| Total retail floor area | 2.7 million square feet (GLA) |
Woodfield Mall is a shopping mall located in the Chicago suburb of Schaumburg, Illinois at the intersection of Golf Road and Illinois Route 53. Woodfield opened on September 9, 1971 with 59 stores, growing to 189 stores with 1.9 million retail square feet by 1973, the largest mall in the United States at that time. It is currently the largest mall in the Chicago area.[1]
The mall is located about 15 miles (24 km) NW of O'Hare Airport and about 28 miles (45 km) from Downtown Chicago.
Contents |
[edit] Acclaim
Due to its location in the suburban area northwest of Chicago, which is seen as brand-savvy and great test market, Woodfield Mall is often the location of concept and prototype stores for established brands, like aerie and Martin + Osa from American Eagle Outfitters and Hollister Co. and Ruehl 925 from Abercrombie and Fitch, with their fourth project, Gilly Hicks rumored to open next.[citation needed]
[edit] History
Woodfield Shopping Center opened with just 28 specialty shops and three department stores. Now, it houses nearly 300 stores and restaurants and five anchors and is the core of the entire northwest suburbs of Chicago.
Woodfield is named for former Sears board chairman General Robert E. Wood and Marshall Field and Company founder Marshall Field. It debuted on September 9, 1971, on 191 acres of prairie land, previously occupied by farms, cows, and a village tavern. Singer Carol Lawrence, actor Vincent Price, and two marching bands entertained at the debut.
By the end of September 1971, another 28 stores and restaurants had opened and that first business year finished with 138 specialty retailers. Many of those retailers -- Casual Corner, Johnston & Murphy, Lane Bryant, The Limited, Stride Rite, Gingiss, Fredericks of Hollywood, Lerner New York (now known as New York & Company or NY&C), and -- are still at Woodfield today (Waldenbooks, another store that opened alongside the mall itself, closed in 2007 as the parent company, Borders Group, operates a Borders Books & Music store nearby at Woodfield Village Green).
Originally 1.9-million square feet of retail space, Woodfield today is 2.7 million feet of retail space. In 1973, Lord & Taylor opened and brought along 50 additional new retailers and a whole new wing. In celebration of its 20th anniversary in 1991, Woodfield added 23 more stores and then in 1996, Woodfield grew again with a $110 million wing. This new wing included a three-level Nordstrom, a larger replacement Lord & Taylor, and 50 new specialty stores. Of these new stores, nearly 40 debuted flagship concepts and designs, with about 27 of them the largest in their chains.
While all of this expansion continued at Woodfield, the surrounding village of Schaumburg grew as well. In 1970, the population was 19,000; in 1980, it mushroomed to 55,000; and, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, Schaumburg had over 75,000 people in 2000. Schaumburg Mayor Al Larson observed that, "Woodfield established a focal point for development throughout all of the northwest suburbs. Without Woodfield, we wouldn't have office towers in Itasca or corporate development in Hoffman Estates."
The GLA of the mall today is 2.7 million square feet, making it the fifth largest shopping mall in the U.S. and third largest in terms of shopping area. (King of Prussia Mall in the Philadelphia suburbs and South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa, California are larger). The mall is not only the most visited tourist destination in Chicagoland, it is the most popular tourist destination in Illinois with 27 million annual visitors. The center features nearly 300 stores and is anchored by J.C. Penney, Lord & Taylor, Macy's (formerly Marshall Field's), Nordstrom and the country's largest Sears store at 416,000 square feet (38,600 m²). Woodfield is often used as a test market for retailers; a recent example was the 2004 opening (and nationwide debut) of RUEHL 925 by youth clothier Abercrombie & Fitch. In 2006, the Marshall Field's store was rebranded Macy's.
[edit] Anchors
- JCPenney (300,000 sq ft (30,000 m²))
- Lord & Taylor (124,000 sq ft (11,500 m²))
- Macy's (315,500 sq ft (29,310 m²))
- Nordstrom (215,000 sq ft (20,000 m²))
- Sears (416,000 sq ft (38,600 m²))
[edit] Transportation
Woodfield is adjacent to I-290 (codesignated as Illinois Route 53 at this point), which runs north-south alongside the eastern edge of the complex. The Northwest Tollway (Interstate 90) runs roughly east-west nearby to the north, intersecting I-290/IL 53 northeast of the mall, but Tollway traffic must exit to I-290 or to other local road exits to access the area.
Pace Bus, the Suburban Bus service, has a complete bus center, which the ending of several routes. It is also the hub for the "Cubs Roundtripper" to Wrigley Field, "Bears Shuttle" to Soldier Field, "Six Flags Shuttle" to Six Flags Great America, and "The Flower and Garden Show" Shuttle.
Schaumburg also has a municipal Heliport (ICAO: 4H1) available for public use. It has the main helicopter pad, 1 helicopter parking space, and grassy area for extra parking.
Other Major Highways that go through the Woodfield area include:
- Illinois Route 58 - Golf Road
- Illinois Route 62 - Algonquin Road
- Illinois Route 72 - Higgins Road
The Woodfield Trolley (owned and operated by Pace) has begun service to the convention center from Woodfield, with trolleys running every 30 minutes.
[edit] The future of the Woodfield area
The Schaumburg Convention Center was completed in 2006. It is located across I-90 from Woodfield, next to Motorola's corporate campus. The 100,000 sq ft (10,000 m²). Convention Center has an adjoining 500 room Renaissance Hotel with 48,000 sq ft (4,500 m²). meeting center including a 28,000 sq ft (2,600 m²). ballroom.
Metra has plans to build an inter-suburban rail service tentatively referred to as the STAR line, with a stop at IKEA.
[edit] See also
- Golden Corridor, the region of commerce around the Northwest Tollway
[edit] References
- ^ Largest Shopping Malls in the United States (2004). American Studies at Eastern Connecticut State University.
[edit] External links
| Chicago area shopping malls |
|---|
| Operating |
| 900 North Michigan • Belvidere Mall • Charlestowne Mall • Chicago Place • Deerbrook Mall • Finley Square • Ford City Mall • Forest Park Mall • Golf Mill Mall • Gurnee Mills • Harlem Irving Plaza • Lincoln Mall • Lincolnwood Town Center • North Park Mall • North Riverside Park Mall • Northbrook Court • Northfield Square • Oak Mill Mall • Orland Square • The Plaza • Randhurst Mall • River Oaks Center • Spring Hill Mall • Stratford Square Mall • Washington Square Mall • Water Tower Place • Westfield Chicago Ridge • Westfield Fox Valley • Westfield Hawthorn • Westfield Louis Joliet • Westfield North Bridge • Westfield Old Orchard • Westfield Southlake • Woodfield Mall • Yorktown Center |
| Lifestyle/Outdoor |
| Algonquin Commons • Countryside Shopping Center • Deer Park Town Center • Galleria Center • Geneva Commons • The Glen Town Center • Oakbrook Center • The Promenade Bolingbrook • Renaissance Place • The Streets of Woodfield |
| Defunct |
| 1800 N. Clybourn • Brementowne Mall • Brickyard Mall • Century Mall • Crystal Point Mall • Dixie Square Mall • Hillcrest Shopping Center • Jefferson Square Mall • Lakehurst Mall • Meadows Town Mall • Meadowvale Mall • North Pier • Old Chicago • One Schaumburg Place • Orland Park Place • Park Forest Mall • Rolling Meadows Shopping Center • St. Charles Mall • South Commons Mall • Town & Country Center |

