Greenbriar Mall
Back Entrance | |
Location | Atlanta, Georgia, USA |
---|---|
Opening date | 1965 |
Owner | Hendon Properties |
No. of stores and services | 100+ |
No. of anchor tenants | 3 |
Total retail floor area | 678,072 sq ft (62,995.0 m2) |
No. of floors | 1 |
Website |
shopgreenbriar |
Greenbriar Mall is a shopping mall in the Greenbriar neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia.
Early years
Greenbriar Center opened in August/September 1965 as Atlanta's third enclosed mall, after Columbia Mall, in 1964, and North Dekalb Center, in July 1965. The mall was designed by Atlanta architect John Portman's firm Edwards and Portman.[1] The design of the mall was like many of the early malls in Atlanta, with an anchor store on each end and an enclosed concourse. The complex opened with Rich's on the east end and J. C. Penney on the west. It was the second-largest suburban Rich's when it first opened. J. C. Penney closed their store on September 28, 1985 after 20 years of operation. In 1987, Uptons took over the former J. C. Penney site and a Circuit City store opened outside the mall. In mid-1992, Cub Foods opened a location on a mall outlot facing Lakewood Freeway. Later in 1992, the Uptons and McCrory's stores in the mall closed for good. A Burlington Coat Factory store opened on September 1, 1995, and remains as of 2015.
Greenbriar Mall housed the very first Chick-fil-A location. Local Atlanta businessman S. Truett Cathy took the chicken sandwiches served at his Dwarf House in nearby Hapeville and opened the Greenbriar store in 1967.[2] Record Bar opened one of its stores there, to be later supplanted by Camelot Music. There was also a Happy Herman's Liquor Store, a Woolworth's dimestore and a branch of the Atlanta Public Library.
In 1996 a Magic Johnson Theatres multiplex opened at the mall,[3] and in 2002 Magic Johnson himself made an unsuccessful effort to buy the mall[4] but the theatres (by then managed by AMC Theatres) closed in 2009.[5] At that point the mall was seen as a somewhat stagnated property, although still mostly occupied.[6]
Anchors
References
- ↑ "Shopping Center Architecture", New Georgia Encyclopedia, May 29, 2008.
- ↑ "Greenbriar Mall location opens".
- ↑ Sheila M. Poole, "Magic Johnson Theaters Could Be Magnet for Atlanta Commercial Development," The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, also reprinted by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News, November 22, 1996 – via HighBeam Research (subscription required) .
- ↑ "`Magic' Johnson Tries to Buy Atlanta Mall," The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, also reprinted by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News, September 7, 2002 – via HighBeam Research (subscription required) .
- ↑ Rachel Tobin Ramos, "Magic Johnson cinema at Greenbriar Mall to close", The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, October 6, 2009.
- ↑ Bill Torpy, "Greenbriar Mall boosters hope for its survival", The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, December 21, 2009.
Coordinates: 33°41′18″N 84°29′36″W / 33.6884°N 84.4933°W