Oakbrook Center
Location | Oak Brook, Illinois |
---|---|
Coordinates | 41°51′2″N 87°57′11″W / 41.85056°N 87.95306°WCoordinates: 41°51′2″N 87°57′11″W / 41.85056°N 87.95306°W |
Address |
100 Oakbrook Center, Oak Brook, Illinois, 60523 |
Opening date | 1962 |
Developer | Philip M. Klutznick |
Management | General Growth Properties |
Owner |
General Growth Properties & CalPERS |
Architect | Richard Marsh Bennett [1] |
No. of stores and services | 160 |
No. of anchor tenants | 6 |
Total retail floor area | 2,018,000 ft² |
No. of floors | 3 (Macy's has 4) |
Website | oakbrookcenter.com |
Oakbrook Center is a shopping center located near Interstate 88 in Oak Brook, Illinois. It was originally opened in 1962. Managed and co-owned by General Growth Properties, it is the second largest shopping center in the Chicago metropolitan area, by gross leasable area.[2] Current anchor stores include Lord & Taylor, Macy's, (formerly Marshall Field's), Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom and Sears.
History
Oakbrook Center, originally to be named Oakbrook Terrace (but the name was changed when a town near the mall took that name), opened in 1962 with Sears and Marshall Field's, as well as a Jewel Food Store. Bonwit Teller was later added, as was Lord & Taylor in 1973 on the south side. I. Magnin, Saks Fifth Avenue, and Neiman Marcus joined the center in a 1981-1982 expansion that doubled the physical size of the center with a new southeast court.
In 1987, a four-screen movie theater (which closed in 2001) was added near Saks Fifth Avenue. Bonwit Teller closed their location in 1990, while I. Magnin was shuttered in January 1991, with its former site subdivided in 1994 for specialty stores, including Eddie Bauer and Tiffany & Company. In 1991 a new two-story, open-air addition opened northeast of Sears. Built on top of a parking garage it added 210,000 ft² of mall retail and a 220,000 ft² Nordstrom.
Saks Fifth Avenue closed their store in 2002 and sold the store to Federated Department Stores, which used the site to open a 91,000 sq.ft. Bloomingdale's Home store on September 12, 2003. Bloomingdale's Home closed in March 2012. Marshall Field's adopted the Macy's name on September 8, 2006.
General Growth Properties acquired a half-interest and management of the mall in 2004, when it acquired The Rouse Company (which had itself acquired its stake the mall in 2002). It is co-owned with an institutional investor, the California Public Employees' Retirement System.
In August 2014, Le Méridien opened a 172 guestroom hotel, which is their first in the state of Illinois. [3]
The sales tax rate for Oak Brook, Illinois (DuPage County) is 7.75%.
Anchors & major retailers
- Macy's - 375,764 sq ft (34,909.6 m2)[4]
- Sears - 284,048 sq ft (26,388.9 m2)
- Nordstrom - 220,036 sq ft (20,442.0 m2)
- Lord & Taylor - 101,997 sq ft (9,475.8 m2)
- Neiman Marcus - 92,099 sq ft (8,556.3 m2)
- Crate & Barrel - 57,899 sq ft (5,379.0 m2)
- Barnes & Noble Booksellers - 39,478 sq ft (3,667.6 m2)
- PIRCH - 30,762 sq ft (2,857.9 m2)
- Zara - 27,077 sq ft (2,515.5 m2)
- Pottery Barn - 26,906 sq ft (2,499.6 m2)
- Victoria's Secret / Bath & Body Works - 25,001 sq ft (2,322.7 m2)
- Forever 21 - 20,000 sq ft (1,900 m2)
- H&M - 15,621 sq ft (1,451.2 m2)
- Gap / GapKids - 15,213 sq ft (1,413.3 m2)
- Restoration Hardware - 12,480 sq ft (1,159 m2)
- Abercrombie & Fitch / abercrombie - 12,200 sq ft (1,130 m2)
- Banana Republic - 12,046 sq ft (1,119.1 m2)
- Talbots - 10,685 sq ft (992.7 m2)
- Urban Outfitters - 10,353 sq ft (961.8 m2)
References
- ↑
- ↑ "Largest Shopping Malls in the United States (2006)". American Studies at Eastern Connecticut State University. Archived from the original on July 16, 2006.
- ↑ Le Meridien Debuts in Chicago with Opening of Le Meridien Chicago – Oakbrook Center Businesswire, 4 August 2014
- ↑ http://www.ggp.com/content/corporate/data/siteleaseplans/OAKBROOK%20CENTER-4386-LP2.pdf