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・ Jacksonville Housing Authority
・ Jacksonville Ice
・ Jacksonville Independent School District
・ Jacksonville Indians
・ Jacksonville International Airport
・ Jacksonville Jaguars
・ Jacksonville Jaguars draft history
・ Jacksonville JAM
・ Jacksonville Jane Doe
・ Jacksonville Jax
・ Jacksonville Jazz Festival
・ Jacksonville Journal
・ Jacksonville Kingfish Tournament
・ Jacksonville Labor Temple
・ Jacksonville Ladies Open
Jacksonville Landing
・ Jacksonville Lizard Kings
・ Jacksonville Maritime Museum
・ Jacksonville mayoral election, 2003
・ Jacksonville mayoral election, 2007
・ Jacksonville mayoral election, 2011
・ Jacksonville mayoral election, 2015
・ Jacksonville metropolitan area
・ Jacksonville metropolitan area (disambiguation)
・ Jacksonville micropolitan area
・ Jacksonville National Cemetery
・ Jacksonville North Pulaski School District
・ Jacksonville Open (tennis)
・ Jacksonville Port Authority
・ Jacksonville Pride


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Jacksonville Landing : ウィキペディア英語版
Jacksonville Landing

The Jacksonville Landing is a shopping, tattoo, dining, clubbing, and historic museum complex in downtown Jacksonville, Florida.〔() Metro Jacksonville.Com, March 22, 2007-Urban Connectivity: The Jacksonville Landing〕 It was built by the Rouse Company at a cost of $37.5 million and opened in 1987. It has been compared to New York City's South Street Seaport, Boston's Faneuil Hall or Miami's Bayside Marketplace,〔(Frommer's Destinations Jacksonville Landing ),〕 all developed by Rouse.
==History==
The Jacksonville Landing was designed and built by the Rouse Company, who developed a number of similar structures in other cities. It opened its doors on June 25, 1987. The Jacksonville Landing hosted a week-long celebration featuring a drum and bugle corps,〔 balloon release, community choirs and national acts. The Rouse company partnered with City of Jacksonville, who contributed $20 million toward the construction〔 of a festival marketplace that would revitalize the city's core.〔
The entire second level of the main building was devoted to the ''Founders Food Hall'', a food court with 18 restaurants. The decor featured silhouettes of 17 individuals who had a role in the settlement of North Florida. Outside seating included a view of the center courtyard fountain, stage, and the river. However, anticipated foot traffic never reached projected numbers and within four years, one third of the food court tenants closed. The west side of the food court became a video arcade named ''Ostrich Landing''.〔
The Landing's first bar was ''Fat Tuesdays'', which offered frozen alcoholic beverages. The business attracted a mostly younger clientele, and the Landing management decided not to renew their 10-year lease when it expired, citing a desire for an "older crowd".〔
In 2003, the Rouse Company announced it would sell the Jacksonville Landing to local developer Toney Sleiman for $5.1 million.〔Bennett, Jane: ("The Landing drags 'the strip mall king' into the limelight" ) Jacksonville Business Journal, June 10, 2005〕 ''The Florida Times-Union'' revealed that Sleiman, who bought the buildings but not the city-owned land, would not have to pay the $100,000 rent required by the City of Jacksonville for the land until the city provided the 800 parking spaces it had promised the previous owners.〔Daniels, Earl:("Landing to go for $5.1 million" ) Florida Times-Union, August 28, 2003〕
In 2010, the 23-year obligation was finally resolved. The Jacksonville City Council passed a bill to contribute $3.5 million toward Sleiman's purchase of an existing parking lot across from the Landing. That money included a 20-year parking validation program at a cost of $2.5 million to the city. Mayor John Peyton vetoed the bill, but the council voted unanimously to override the veto.


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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