Rolling Oaks Mall

Shopping mall in Texas, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rolling Oaks Mallmap

Rolling Oaks Mall is a regional shopping mall located in northeast San Antonio, Texas, at the intersection of Loop 1604 and Nacogdoches Road. It is anchored by Dillard's and JCPenney. There are two vacant anchor stores that were once Sears and Macy's.

Quick Facts Location, Coordinates ...
Rolling Oaks Mall
LocationSan Antonio, Texas, United States
Coordinates29.597°N 98.350°W / 29.597; -98.350
Opening date1988
DeveloperMelvin Simon and Associates
OwnerSummit Properties USA
No. of stores and services100+
No. of anchor tenants4 (2 open, 2 vacant by April 2021)
Total retail floor area889,000 square feet (82,600 m2)
No. of floors2
Websiterollingoaksmall.com
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History

Summarize
Perspective

The mall developed by Simon Property Group opened in 1988, with anchor stores Dillard's and Sears, in a remote location surrounded mostly by farmland on the Northeast side of the city. As a result of miscalculated growth projections in the area and a less than ideal location the mall initially struggled.

A 6-screen movie theater operated by Act III Theaters under the Santikos Entertainment brand opened in 1991,[1] and a Beall's in 1995. The theater and Beall's closed in 2001. The theater space eventually became a skate park and is now an Inflatable Wonderland. The Beall's space reopened as an H&M outlet in 2017.[2] In 1992 the mall expanded its retail area with a new wing and added a third anchor, Foley's (rebranded as Macy's in 2006).

As the city grew to meet the mall, Rolling Oaks has repositioned itself and is a stable retail center.[3] Additionally, JCPenney opened a new store at the mall in 2004. The original site plan was designed to accommodate 5 anchor stores and one minor anchor store.[4] In 2014 Simon Property Group rolled over ownership of Rolling Oaks Mall, along with 97 other smaller properties in their portfolio into its REIT, Washington Prime Group.[5]

On June 19, 2020, it was announced that Sears would be closing as part of a plan to close 28 stores nationwide. The store closed in August 2020.[6]

On January 6, 2021, it was announced that Macy's would be closing in April 2021 as part of a plan to close 46 stores nationwide.[7] The store closed in April 2021, and as of May 2021, Dillard's and JCPenney are the only anchor stores left. The mall was purchased by the Kohan Retail Investment Group in September 2022.[8]

2017 shooting

On January 22, 2017, Jonathan Murphy, 42 was killed and two others were injured after two men robbed a jewelry store in the mall.[9] Police Chief William McManus released in a statement that after the two suspects fled the store on Sunday, they were accosted by a pair of "good Samaritans", at least one of whom was armed using a concealed carry permit. One suspect was injured in a successful attempt to stop him, however, Murphy, who was among the pair of Samaritans, was shot and killed in the process. The other suspect fled the mall, firing his weapon and injuring others.[10] He was eventually caught and arrested by Converse police later that day after crashing a stolen getaway car.[11] The two suspects, Jose Luis Rojas and Jason Prieto were later charged with capital murder.[12] In 2018, Rojas was sentenced to life after pleading guilty to the reduced charged of murder plus 20 years.[13] Later that year, Prieto was convicted of murder instead of capital murder and was sentenced to 40 years.[14]

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Major anchors

Minor anchors

  • H&M (opened 2017, 20,000 sq ft.)

Former anchors

  • Beall's (opened 1995, closed 2001, 20,000 sq ft.)
  • Sears (opened 1988, closed August 2020, 133,935 sq ft.)
  • Macy's (opened 1992 as Foley's, became Macy's 2006, closed April 2021, 150,313 sq ft.)

References

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