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Columbia Mall (Grand Forks) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Columbia Mall (Grand Forks)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Columbia Mall
Facts and statistics
Location Grand Forks, North Dakota
Opening date August 2, 1978
Developer Dayton Hudson Corporation
Owner GK Development, Inc.
No. of stores and services 70+
No. of anchor tenants 3
Total retail floor area 710,000 square feet
No. of floors 1
Website shopcolumbiamall.com

Columbia Mall is an enclosed regional shopping mall in the city of Grand Forks, North Dakota and is located at the intersection of 32nd Avenue South and Columbia Road. It is the largest mall within 70 miles (110 km). It opened in 1978 and was developed by the Dayton Hudson Corporation (now Target Corporation). The company anchored the mall with one of its Dayton's department stores as well as one of its Target discount stores. The Columbia Mall Target store was the first Target that was built as the anchor of an enclosed shopping center.[1]

Today, Columbia Mall houses three department store anchors (Macy's, J.C. Penney, and Sears), a 416-seat food court, and over 70 smaller stores. GK Development, Inc. of Barrington, Illinois is the current owner of the mall and is in the process of updating it and expanding its offerings. The new Dakota Cafe food court and a children's play area both opened in the fall of 2005.

Contents

[edit] History

Columbia Mall (Grand Forks)
Columbia Mall
Columbia Mall
Location of Columbia Mall



Dayton Hudson experienced fierce competition for a new mall in the city of Grand Forks in 1975.[2] While their proposal was to build a mall at the intersection of 32nd Avenue South and Columbia Road, Inland Construction of Edina, Minnesota wanted to build a mall at 32nd Avenue South and Washington Street (one mile east of the Dayton Hudson site), which was quickly dismissed, while a group of local investors and Farber-Kelley Ltd. of Toronto advanced a proposal for a mall at Demers Avenue and 42nd Street to be called "Marketplace West". While Marketplace West was initially preferred by the city planning department, a referendum was called to annex Dayton Hudson's proposed Columbia Mall site to the city. When it passed, the city council interpreted it as a public endorsement of the Columbia Mall project. Interestingly, the Marketplace West site would later become the home of the Alerus Center arena and convention center.

Columbia Mall opened on August 2, 1978. It was developed by Dayton Hudson Corporation at a cost of around $20 million. On opening day, the mall had 571,800 sq ft (53,120 m²) of floor space. The anchor stores of the new mall included both Dayton Hudson-owned Target and Dayton's stores as well as a J.C. Penney store. The Columbia Mall Target store was the first Target that was built as the anchor of an enclosed shopping center. The jingle "Meet me at Columbia Mall" was heavily used to promote the mall during its early days.[citation needed] Television commercials for the mall included the jingle and a special Christmas version of the jingle (changed to "Christmas at Columbia Mall") was used in holiday ads.

In 2000, a Sears department store opened as an anchor of the mall. Also, Target closed their Columbia Mall store in 2001 and opened a SuperTarget store in the new Grand Forks Marketplace mall a few blocks west of Columbia Mall. GK Development is examining various options for improving the Target site at Columbia Mall. In 2001, the original Dayton's store was converted into a Marshall Field's store. In September of 2006, Marshall Fields was again converted, this time into a Macy's store. Today, the only anchor that bears the same name as it did when the mall first opened in 1978 is the J.C. Penney store.

The mall received national attention in 2003 after being the site of a high-profile crime.[3] On November 22, 2003, University of North Dakota student Dru Sjodin was leaving her job at Victoria's Secret when she was abducted by Alfonso Rodriguez, Jr.. Rodriguez crossed state lines into Minnesota with Sjodin where he brutally assaulted, raped, and murdered her. He was convicted of the crime on August 30, 2006.

[edit] Current anchors

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Information about the history of the Target store chain
  2. ^ "Picking mall site sparked lots of fussin' n' fightin'", Herschel Kenner, Grand Forks Herald, 1 August 1978, p. B1
  3. ^ CNN.com story about Sjodin kidnapping

[edit] External links


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