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Rockville Mall : ウィキペディア英語版
Rockville Mall

Rockville Mall was an indoor shopping mall in Rockville, Maryland. Opened in 1972, the mall originated as part of an urban renewal project. Much of it was demolished in 1995, and later replaced with Rockville Town Center.
==History==
In 1962, Rockville became the first small city in Maryland to undertake a federal urban renewal program. Forty-six acres in the town center were bought; old and new buildings were demolished, and street patterns were changed. In their place rose the residential Americana Centre, more County buildings, high-rise offices, and a large shopping mall with 1,560 spaces of underground parking.〔(Peerless Rockville website, article Rockville Town Center, March 2000 ).〕 A decade after the project began, the , 40 shop Rockville Mall opened in 1972, on .
Although designed originally to have Sears and JC Penney as the two anchors, no second lease was ever signed. The sole anchor at opening was a branch of the Washington, D.C.-based Lansburgh's department store chain. Within a year, Lansburgh's closed and was replaced briefly with a branch of Lit Brothers, followed by a W. & J. Sloane furniture clearance center and Franklin Simon & Co. store.〔"Rockville Mall Struggles On," by Claudia Levy, ''The Washington Post'', May 5, 1974, p. G1.〕 Those stores closed with the bankruptcy of City Stores in 1979.
The mall was renamed in 1978 as the Commons at Courthouse Square and by 1981, 35 of the 55 store fronts were vacant.〔"Rockville's Moribund Mall," by Claudia Levy, ''The Washington Post'', Jun 4, 1981, p. MD4.〕 That year, despite the opening of the adjacent Montgomery County Executive Office Building, tenancy eventually dwindled to a handful, the property's New York-based owner, Rockville Development Associates, went bankrupt, and the mall was closed.〔"Rockville's New Hope Ready for Occupancy," by John Burgess, ''The Washington Post'', May 22, 1981, p. B1.〕
In 1983, Eisenger-Kildane of Gaithersburg, Maryland, spent $50 million attempting to redevelop it as a more entertainment-oriented facility. It was reopened as Rockville Metro Center, reflecting the connection at its east end to the newly opened Rockville Metro station across Maryland Route 355. This renovation brought in the late 1980s a large United Artists theater complex and "Breakers," a billiards parlor. Though these businesses, at the east end of the mall closest to the Metro station, attracted some traffic, the remainder of the mall lacked attractive tenants and therefore remained largely vacant.
Rockville Mayor and later Montgomery County executive Doug Duncan launched a massive campaign against the mall, known locally as the "Berlin Wall", in 1993, arguing that the large, scarcely occupied facility was a millstone holding back downtown development and limiting the city's property tax intake. His argument struck a chord with the majority in Rockville, and the west end of the mall was finally torn down in 1995 (the portion connected to the Metro station still exists as an office/health care/fitness center complex that is not recognizable as having once been part of a mall). New York-based Essex Capital Partners purchased the mall from Marine Midland Bank in 1998. Later that year, they opened the first phase of the $300 million Rockville Center, project, which included renovated and expanded theaters and a "restaurant row." 〔("Rockville site: new lease on life?," by Jonah Keri, Washington Business Journal, Aug 28, 1998 ).〕

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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