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Almeda Mall

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Shopping mall in Texas, United States
Almeda Mall
LocationGenoa, Houston, Texas, United States
Coordinates29°37′24″N 95°13′40″W / 29.62333°N 95.22778°W / 29.62333; -95.22778
Address12200 Gulf Freeway
Opening dateOctober 10, 1968 (56 years ago) (1968-10-10)
DeveloperThe Rouse Company
Owner4th Dimension Properties
ArchitectRay Bailey Architects
No. of anchor tenants4 (3 open, 1 vacant)
Total retail floor area782,353 sq ft (72,683.0 m)
No. of floors1
Websitewww.almedamall.com

Almeda Mall is a shopping mall located in the Southeast Houston neighborhood of Genoa on Interstate 45. The mall opened in 1968. The anchor stores are dd's DISCOUNTS, and 3.6.5. One vacant anchor store was once Burlington. The other was Macy's, closing in 2025.

The mall has 782,353 square feet (72,683.0 m) in leasable space.

History

Almeda Mall was constructed in 1968, but the Foley's (now Macy's) had arrived two years earlier in the spring of 1966 and JCPenney was the other original anchor. Almeda was the premiere mall for the area southeast of Houston until 1978 when Baybrook Mall opened a few exits south, much closer to the affluent Clear Lake/NASA area. Baybrook quickly replaced Almeda as the area's highly successful mall. The mall also received a much bigger decline in the early 2000's as nearby Pearland began to receive openings of major retailers in along 288 and the opening of the Pearland Town Center in 2008. Around 2017, the mall underwent a million dollar renovation project, replacing the old brown brick flooring and walls.

In 2006, the mall was about 95% occupied. During that year Glimcher Realty Trust put the mall up for sale, along with the Northwest Mall, which was purchased by WCF Mall Management, but then permanently closed in March 2017. JCPenney closed in 2006 and relocated to Pasadena, TX. Burlington Coat Factory took its spot. In 2006, Foley's rebranded to Macy's after its acquisition by The May Department Stores Company in 2005.

Palais Royal closed in 2019, eventually being replaced by the store 365, which was initially located in the South wing of the mall, near Burlington.

On January 9, 2025, it was announced that Macy's would be closing as part of a plan to close 66 stores nationwide. The store will close in March 2025, which will leave the mall with no traditional anchors left.

References

  1. Gonzales, J.R. "Almeda Mall in pictures". Houston Chronicle. Archived from the original on March 2, 2020. Retrieved January 10, 2025.
  2. McGuff, Mike (March 31, 2023). "Retail News: Almeda Mall down an anchor after Burlington moves North". houstonhistoricretail.com.
  3. ^ Tyko, Kelly (January 9, 2025). "Macy's closing 66 more stores in 2025. See the closure list". Axios. Retrieved January 9, 2025.
  4. ^ "Glimcher puts Almeda, Northwest malls up for sale." Houston Business Journal. Friday May 19, 2006. 1. Retrieved on October 22, 2011.
  5. Resolut. "Almeda Mall" (PDF).

External links

Shopping centers and malls in Greater Houston
Downtown and
Uptown
Super-regional enclosed malls
The Galleria
Enclosed local malls
The Shops at Houston Center
Outdoor/lifestyle
Bayou Place
Highland Village
GreenStreet
River Oaks District
River Oaks Shopping Center
Defunct
Saks Fifth Avenue Center of Fashion (Saks Pavilion, Pavilion at Post Oak)
North Harris and
Montgomery County
Super-regional enclosed malls
Deerbrook (Humble)
Woodlands (The Woodlands)
Outdoor/lifestyle
Market Street (The Woodlands)
Teas Crossing (Conroe)
Cy-Fair and
Northern Houston
Super-regional enclosed malls
Willowbrook
Outdoor/lifestyle
Houston Premium Outlets (Cypress)
Northline Commons
Vintage Park Houston
Defunct
Greenspoint
Northline Mall
Northwest
Katy and
West Houston
Super-regional enclosed malls
Katy Mills (Katy)
Memorial City
Enclosed local malls
West Oaks
Outdoor/lifestyle
CityCentre
LaCenterra (Cinco Ranch)
Marq*E
Town & Country Village
Defunct
Town & Country Mall
Southwest Houston
and Bellaire
Enclosed local malls
PlazAmericas (Sharpstown)
Outdoor/lifestyle
Hong Kong City
Meyerland Plaza
Rice Village
Village Arcade
Defunct
Westbury Square
Westwood
Fort Bend and
Brazoria Counties
Super-regional enclosed malls
First Colony (Sugar Land)
Enclosed local malls
Brazos (Lake Jackson)
Outdoor/lifestyle
Brazos Town Center (Rosenberg)
Pearland Town Center (Pearland)
Sugar Land Town Square (Sugar Land)
Southeast Houston
and Galveston County
Super-regional enclosed malls
Baybrook
Enclosed local malls
Almeda
Macroplaza Mall (Pasadena)
Outdoor/lifestyle
Gulfgate Center
The Strand (Galveston)
Tanger Outlets Texas City (Texas City)
Victory Lakes Town Center (League City)
Defunct
Galvez Mall (Galveston)
Gulfgate Mall
Mall of the Mainland (Texas City)
Palms Center
Port Holiday Mall (Galveston)
San Jacinto (Baytown)
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