Everett Mall

Everett Mall
Everett Mall logo
Map
LocationEverett, Washington, United States
Coordinates47°54′37″N 122°12′47″W / 47.91035°N 122.21309°W / 47.91035; -122.21309
Opening dateOctober 1974 (original mall portion)
DeveloperEarl Cohen & Associates (1967–1972)
Hanson Development Company (1972–1979)
ManagementJLL
OwnerBrixton Capital
ArchitectLaw Construction Company
MulvannyG2 Architecture (2004 remodel)
No. of stores and services100+
No. of anchor tenants13 (11 open, 2 vacant)
Total retail floor area673,000 sq ft (62,500 m2)
No. of floors1
Websiteshopeverettmall.com

Everett Mall is a 673,000-square-foot (62,500 m2) indoor/outdoor shopping mall located in Everett, Washington, United States. Planned in the late 1960s, the mall began with the construction of two anchor stores, Sears in 1969 and White Front in 1971; the mall was originally built and opened in 1974. It was plagued from the start of development: construction was stalled in 1972 due to the Boeing bust, and it suffered further misfortune with one anchor store closing before the rest of the mall could open. The mall also had a low tenant rate upon opening, only rebounding after The Bon Marché (later Macy's) opened in 1977; the success led to the construction of an additional north wing to the mall anchored by the upscale Frederick & Nelson department store. In 2004, the mall underwent a massive expansion and renovation that included the addition of a 16-screen movie theater and outdoor stores along the south side. The mall's anchor stores are Regal Cinemas, LA Fitness, Burlington, Best Buy, PetSmart, TJ Maxx, Home Goods, Floor & Decor, Ulta Beauty, Party City, and Trader Joe's There are two vacant anchor stores that were the old location of Ulta, and Sears, which will become At Home in Late 2024.

Mervyn's, an anchor since 1992, closed late 2006. The store was replaced with LA Fitness and Steve & Barry's.[1] Steve & Barry's in turn was closed in 2009 after its owners filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and was replaced by Burlington Coat Factory in 2013. Macy's closed its store in 2017 followed by Sears in early 2020.

  1. ^ "Steadfast Companies". Archived from the original on December 5, 2008. Retrieved February 28, 2007.