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Tysons Galleria

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Opening date
  
1988

No. of anchor tenants
  
3

Total retail floor area
  
7 ha

Number of stores and services
  
120

No. of stores and services
  
120+

Opened
  
1988

Phone
  
+1 703-827-7730

Number of anchor tenants
  
3

Tysons Galleria

Location
  
2001 International Drive, McLean, Virginia, United States

Developer
  
Lerner Enterprises and Homart Development Company

Owner
  
GGP Platinum Properties

Address
  
2001 International Dr, McLean, VA 22102, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–9PMMonday10AM–9PMTuesday10AM–9PMWednesday10AM–9PMThursday10AM–9PMFriday10AM–9PMSaturday10AM–9PMSunday12–6PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Tysons Corner Center, The Fashion Centre at, Fair Oaks Mall, Dulles Town Center, Potomac Mills

Profiles

Lamborghini being brought to tysons galleria


Tysons Galleria is an upscale three-level super-regional mall owned by General Growth Properties located at 2001 International Drive, McLean, Virginia, in Tysons Corner. It is the second-largest mall in McLean/Tysons Corner, and one of the largest in the Washington metropolitan area.

Contents

Very nice montgomery glass hydraulic elevator tysons galleria mclean va


History

Tysons Galleria was the third major project of the Gudelsky-Lerner partnership. The property was purchased from The Rouse Company which lost a bitter zoning dispute over the site in 1963. In 1981, Lerner bought out the partnership for $21 million, before embarking on a $550 million expansion. The mall opened with high-end department stores Neiman Marcus and Saks 5th Avenue in 1988 across Virginia State Route 123 from Tysons Corner Center. The mall is a part of the $500 million ($1 billion in 2014 dollars) office development The Corporate Office Centre at Tysons II, leading regional residents to refer to Tysons Galleria as "Tysons II", and the older Tysons Corner Center retroactively as "Tysons I". It was previously known as the Galleria at Tysons II. It had annual sales of $262 per square foot, below the market average for malls in the Washington metropolitan area in the early 1990s.

The Galleria was renovated to appear more like a "European streetscape" and expanded in 1997 by Homart Development Company, who had its name changed to Tysons Galleria. Its interior was lightly remodeled to appear less like a "space walk".

The mall eventually attracted the high-end tenants that it had hoped for. National Geographic stated in its December 2002 issue that "Tysons Galleria is the Rodeo Drive of the East Coast." The Washington Post describes it as a "bright and elegant Fifth Avenue-like mall". Tysons Galleria was rated one of the top 15 sales-producing shopping centers in terms of dollars per square foot by WWD in 2003.

Layout and tenants

Tysons Galleria features valet parking and concierge services, including having large purchases delivered and organized into customers' closets. The mall has given consistently big-spending customers reserved parking spaces. The Galleria also has foreign currency exchanges, day spas, security escorts, and taxi services. An adjacent Ritz-Carlton hotel is accessible from inside the mall, much like in the nearby Fashion Centre at Pentagon City in Arlington. The hotel attracts wealthy visitors from Europe, the Middle East, and the Far East, who in turn help fuel sales of the mall's high-end goods.

FAO Schwarz operated a three-level store that closed in 2001, but occasionally the company will open a temporary location for the winter holiday shopping season. The mall also had one of the original locations of Tiffany & Co.'s Iridesse.

Several designers, including Bottega Veneta, Chanel, David Yurman, De Beers, Elie Tahari, Salvatore Ferragamo, Tory Burch, and Versace, have their only statewide and Baltimore-Washington area boutiques in Tysons Galleria. Similarly, some high-end watch makers, including Breguet and Girard-Perregaux, have their only regional point of sale in Tysons Galleria.

The Macy's at Tysons Galleria caters to an affluent audience, carrying higher-end brands that are not found at the Macy's in neighboring Tysons Corner Center (which was originally a Hecht's).

Anchors

  • Macy's
  • Neiman Marcus
  • Saks Fifth Avenue
  • References

    Tysons Galleria Wikipedia