Mobile Festival Centre

Mobile Festival Centre
Location Mobile, Alabama
Coordinates 30°40′24″N 88°08′11″W / 30.67327°N 88.136401°W / 30.67327; -88.136401Coordinates: 30°40′24″N 88°08′11″W / 30.67327°N 88.136401°W / 30.67327; -88.136401
Address Airport Boulevard and Montlimar Drive
Opening date November 1986
Management Kimco Realty Corp.
Owner Kimco Realty Corp.
Architect Glenn Golson, Architecture Plus
No. of anchor tenants 6
Total retail floor area 380,619 sq. ft.
No. of floors 1
Website

The Mobile Festival Centre is a shopping mall located in Mobile, Alabama. It is owned by the New York-based Kimco Realty Corporation.[1]

The centre contains 6 anchor tenants: Academy Sports + Outdoors, Bed Bath & Beyond, Guitar Center, hhgregg, Ross Dress For Less, and Virginia College. It located on Montlimar Drive and has road frontage to Airport Boulevard.

History

The Mobile Festival Centre was originally developed by Montgomery-based CF Halstead and Associates. It was designed by firm Architecture Plus of Monroe, Louisiana. When it debuted in November 1986, the $40 million, 500,000 square foot shopping complex was considered one of the largest examples of the nascent power center format in the Southeastern United States. Situated on seventy-two acres at the intersection of Airport Boulevard and Montlimar Drive, the Mobile Festival Centre had many national retailers new to the market anchoring its smaller in-line tenants. The first Wal-Mart Discount City department store inside the Mobile city limits was joined by Circuit City, Phar-Mor, Sugar's, Marshall's, Ross’ Dress For Less and one of the few locations of Kroger's unconventional supermarket warehouse format: Welcome.

A walkway featuring a blue metal canopy runs between each retailer, shielding visitors from the elements. The roughly horseshoe-shaped power center featured attributes commonly seen in enclosed shopping centers. The power center's food court had more than 400 seats in an interior and open-air setting. Adjacent the food court, there were a couple of casual dining restaurants, including O'Charley's bar and grill. A landscaped plaza was the focal point of the food court and was designed for civic functions and other festivities. Beyond this was an entertainment anchor in the form of Cinemark's Movies 10 discount multiplex.

As nearby strip malls were developed and other regional shopping centers evolved, the Mobile Festival Centre’s power center format was faced with increased competition. Walmart closed in favor of a nearby supercenter constructed on a portion of the site of Springdale Mall’s aborted north wing expansion. Cinemark shuttered its Movies 10 complex of theaters at the Festival Centre. Kroger’s Welcome warehouse also closed in the mid 1990s.

Many stores either closed or moved during the 1990s, but some, such as EB Games and Guitar Center opened. However, there are still many vacancies in the center.[1]

Current tenants

Anchors

Others

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.