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Champlain Centre

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Opening date
  
July 1, 1987

No. of anchor tenants
  
6

Opened
  
1 July 1987

Phone
  
+1 518-561-8660

Number of anchor tenants
  
6

Developer
  
The Pyramid Companies

No. of floors
  
1

Total retail floor area
  
6 ha

Owner
  
The Pyramid Companies

Location
  
Plattsburgh, New York, U.S.

Address
  
60 Smithfield Blvd, Plattsburgh, NY 12901, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 9:30AM–9PMThursday9:30AM–9PMFriday9:30AM–9PMSaturday9:30AM–9PMSunday11AM–6PMMonday9:30AM–9PMTuesday9:30AM–9PMWednesday9:30AM–9PM

Similar
  
Champlain Valley Transport, Kent‑Delord House, Adirondack Mountains, Aviation Mall, Salmon Run Mall

Profiles

Regal champlain centre 8 now open


Champlain Centre is a shopping mall in Plattsburgh, New York. Opened in 1987, the mall features J. C. Penney, Target, Best Buy, Gander Mountain, Dick's Sporting Goods, DSW, and a Regal Entertainment Group-owned movie theater.

Contents

Champlain centre arcades


History

Before the mall opened, The Pyramid Companies had operated another mall in Plattsburgh known as Pyramid Mall, anchored by J. C. Penney, Montgomery Ward, Price Chopper and Kmart. As this center was landlocked and incapable of expansion, Pyramid chose to build another mall to its north. The new mall was named Champlain Centre, and the old one was named Champlain Centre South. JCPenney moved to the newer mall, while Champlain Centre South was briefly redeveloped as an outlet mall before being demolished in the late 1990s.

Champlain Centre opened July 1, 1987. In addition to the new J. C. Penney store, it was anchored by Sears, Hills, Steinbach, Hoyts Cinemas, and Service Merchandise, which opened that November. A Toys "R" Us opened at the mall in 1997, and Old Navy joined in 1998. Steinbach and Service Merchandise both closed in 1999, and Toys "R" Us closed in 2002. Dick's Sporting Goods replaced the old Steinbach in 2003, Gander Mountain replaced Service Merchandise in 2004, and Borders Books & Music replaced Toys "R" US in 2005, while the Hills store was converted to Ames following that chain's acquisition of Hills. Ames closed in 2002 with the chain's bankruptcy, and the space became Target in 2008.

Rex Appliances closed in 2005 and Best Buy joined the mall in 2006 in the former space of Rex, Borders closed in 2011, Wendell's Furniture replaced Borders in 2012, and DSW, Inc. opened in 2014. Hoyts Cinemas closed in 2010 for renovations, including the addition of stadium seating, and became Regal Cinemas in 2012. It reopened in late 2012. In April 2016, Sears closed their doors.

References

Champlain Centre Wikipedia