List of shopping malls in New Jersey
Shopping malls in New Jersey have played a major role in shaping the suburban landscape of the state following World War II.
History
New Jersey, the most densely populated state in the United States, and in the suburban sphere of influence of both New York City and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, has a comparatively large number of notable malls throughout the state. Paramus, in Bergen County, is one of the largest shopping meccas in the country, with its four major shopping malls accounting for a significant proportion of the over $5 billion in annual retail sales generated in the borough, more than any other ZIP Code in the United States. This high level of retail sales persists despite the fact that the County, in general, and the Borough, in particular, have blue laws that force the malls and other retailers to close on Sunday.Garden State Plaza was the state's first shopping mall. It opened in three stages between May 1957 and August 1960 and was fully enclosed in 1983. The shopping complex is now known as Westfield Garden State Plaza. The Garden State's second mall-type shopping venue, Bergen Mall, was built in Paramus and Maywood and was officially dedicated on November 14, 1957, with great fanfare, as Dave Garroway, host of The Today Show served as master of ceremonies.
The Bergen Mall, which was fully enclosed in 1973, was first planned in 1955 by Allied Stores to have 100 stores and 8,600 parking spaces in a mall that would include a Stern's store and two other department stores as part of the initial design. Allied's chairman B. Earl Puckett confidently announced The Bergen Mall as the largest of ten proposed centers, stating that there were 25 cities that could support such centers and that no more than 50 malls of this type would ever be built nationwide.
Cherry Hill Mall, was the first large indoor shopping center on the East Coast of the United States and attracted busloads of visitors soon after its opening in October 1961.. The popularity of the mall as a destination is often cited as one of the factors that led the mall's host municipality to change its name from Delaware Township, to its current name of Cherry Hill Township.
Despite an early refusal to temporarily close other New Jersey shopping malls during the COVID-19 pandemic, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy eventually agreed to do so on March 17, 2020. This came one day after the Jersey Gardens closed after an employee tested positive for COVID-19 and Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop closed Jersey City's two major shopping malls Newport Centre and Hudson Mall.
Role as public square
With the shift in shopping from publicly owned Main Streets to privately held shopping malls, the question of access to malls, and their shoppers, as a public forum has been an issue raised nationwide. This issue has become particularly relevant in New Jersey, where malls in both suburban and exurban areas have largely supplanted local downtown districts as shopping destinations, depriving individuals and organizations of a public location to reach out to neighbors for distribution of fliers and other forms of expression. While different conclusions have been reached elsewhere, New Jersey's approach has been one of the most expansive in providing groups with access to malls as a public forum, despite their private ownership.The Bergen Mall was the target of a lawsuit by nuclear-freeze advocates who challenged the malls restrictions on distribution of literature to shoppers. On October 12, 1984, Bergen County Superior Court judge Paul R. Huot ruled that the organization should be allowed to distribute literature anywhere and anytime in a shopping mall, noting that "The Bergen Mall has assumed the features and characteristics of the traditional town center for the citizens who reside in Paramus and surrounding Bergen County towns."
The New Jersey Supreme Court has been at the forefront in providing access to malls as a public forum under the New Jersey State Constitution's free-speech protections, requiring private owners of shopping malls to allow use as a forum by individuals and groups. In New Jersey Coalition Against War in the Middle East v. JMB Realty Corp., the Court ruled that because the mall owners "have intentionally transformed their property into a public square or market, a public gathering place, a downtown business district, a community," they cannot later deny their own implied invitation to use the space as it was clearly intended. Despite the broad powers granted to those seeking to use these facilities as public forums, mall owners retain the right to establish regulations regulating the time, place and manner of exercising of freedom of speech rights on their properties.
Role as performance venue
In their role as a public forum, malls have also developed a role as a public performance venue, as an addition to theaters, arenas and stadiums. Singer Tiffany was one of the pioneers in this innovative use of malls, using the mall tour as a stepping stone to stardom. The first performance on Tiffany's mall tour — "The Beautiful You: Celebrating The Good Life Shopping Mall Tour '87" — took place on June 23, 1987 at The Bergen Mall in Paramus. The tour was sponsored by major advertisers Toyota, Clairol, and Adidas. While perhaps not the first singer to do so, Tiffany established the shopping mall as a location for public performances. Britney Spears' Hair Zone Mall Tour built on Tiffany's use of the mall as a medium to reach fans. Currently, the New Jersey Youth Symphony plays annually in the Jersey Gardens Outlet Mall. This performance is known as the Playathon and occurs in March.List of enclosed malls
The following is a sortable list of shopping malls in the state of New Jersey:Mall | City | Retail space Square feet | Stores | Anchor stores/entertainment venues | Year opened | Ownership |
Playground Pier | Atlantic City | 320,788 | 10 | 1906 | C-III Capital Partners | |
The Quarter at Tropicana | Atlantic City | 200,000 | 40+ | 2004 | Tropicana Entertainment | |
Bridgewater Commons | Bridgewater | 1,002,532 | 170 | Bloomingdale's, Lord & Taylor, Macy's, AMC Theatres | 1988 | Brookfield Properties |
Cherry Hill Mall | Cherry Hill | 1,283,000 | 160 | JCPenney, Macy's, Nordstrom | 1961 | PREIT |
Deptford Mall | Deptford | 1,069,657 | 154 | Boscov's, JCPenney, Macy's | 1975 | Macerich |
Brunswick Square | East Brunswick | 760,998 | 60+ | JCPenney, Macy's | 1970 | Washington Prime Group |
American Dream Meadowlands | East Rutherford | 3,000,000 | 450+ | Nickelodeon Universe, DreamWorks Water Park, Big Snow American Dream | 2019 | Triple Five Group |
Monmouth Mall | Eatontown | 1,500,000 | 150 | Boscov's, JCPenney, Macy's | 1960 | Brookfield Properties |
Menlo Park Mall | Edison | 1,232,000 | 167 | Macy's, Nordstrom, Barnes & Noble, AMC Theatres | 1959 | Simon Property Group |
The Mills at Jersey Gardens | Elizabeth | 1,292,611 | 230 | Century 21, Saks Fifth Avenue Off 5th, Bed Bath & Beyond, AMC Theatres, Burlington, VF, Marshalls, Forever 21 | 1999 | Simon Property Group |
Freehold Raceway Mall | Freehold | 1,671,000 | 237 | JCPenney, Lord & Taylor, Macy's, Primark | 1990 | Macerich |
The Shops at Riverside | Hackensack | 637,963 | 66 | Bloomingdale's, AMC Theatres | 1977 | Simon Property Group |
Hudson Mall | Jersey City | 377,090 | ||||
Newport Centre | Jersey City | 1,149,147 | 131 | JCPenney, Kohl's, Macy's, Sears | 1987 | LeFrak Organization & Simon Property Group |
Quaker Bridge Mall | Lawrence Township | 1,102,000 | 116 | JCPenney, Macy's, Lord & Taylor | 1975 | Simon Property Group |
Livingston Mall | Livingston | 980,000 | 109 | Barnes & Noble, Lord & Taylor, Macy's | 1972 | Simon Property Group |
Hamilton Mall | Mays Landing | 1,028,500 | 115 | Macy's | 1987 | |
Moorestown Mall | Moorestown | 1,046,100 | 90+ | Boscov's, HomeSense, Michaels, Planet Fitness, Sierra | 1963 | PREIT |
Center City Mall | Paterson | 320,000 | Marshalls, Modells, PriceRite, Fabian 8 Cinema | 2008 | City of Paterson | |
The Outlets at Bergen Town Center | Paramus | 1,011,575 | 100 | Bloomingdale's The Outlet Store Burlington, Century 21, HomeGoods, Marshalls, Neiman Marcus Last Call, Nordstrom Rack, Saks Fifth Avenue Off Fifth, Target, Whole Foods | 1957 | Urban Edge Properties |
Garden State Plaza | Paramus | 2,132,112 | 335 | Lord & Taylor, Macy's, Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom, AMC Theatres | 1957 | Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield |
Paramus Park | Paramus | 764,996 | 107 | Macy's, Stew Leonard's | 1974 | Brookfield Properties |
MarketFair Mall | Princeton | 245,947 | 47 | Barnes & Noble, AMC Theatres | 1987 | Madison Marquette |
Rockaway Townsquare | Rockaway Township | 1,250,000 | 152 | Macy's, JCPenney, Sears, Raymour & Flanigan, Lord & Taylor | 1977 | Simon Property Group |
The Mall at Short Hills | Short Hills | 1,342,000 | 160+ | Bloomingdale's, Macy's, Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom | 1961 | Taubman Centers |
Ocean County Mall | Toms River | 791,125 | 105 | Boscov's, JCPenney, Macy's | 1976 | Simon Property Group |
Cumberland Mall | Vineland | 921,593 | Boscov's, Burlington, Dick's Sporting Goods | 1973 | PREIT | |
Voorhees Town Center | Voorhees | 732,000 | 50+ | Boscov's | 1970 | Mason Asset Management and Namdar Realty Group |
Willowbrook Mall | Wayne | 1,514,000 | 165 | Bloomingdale's Macy's, Lord & Taylor, Dave & Buster's | 1969 | Brookfield Properties |
Woodbridge Center | Woodbridge | 1,633,000 | 200 | Boscov's, Dick's Sporting Goods, JCPenney, Macy's, Dave & Busters | 1971 | Brookfield Properties |
List of outdoor malls
Largest malls
The largest malls in New Jersey—those with at least of Gross Leasable Area and ranked in descending order by size—are:- American Dream Meadowlands –
- Westfield Garden State Plaza –
- Freehold Raceway Mall –
- Woodbridge Center –
- Willowbrook Mall –
- Monmouth Mall –
- Short Hills Mall –
- The Mills at Jersey Gardens –
- Rockaway Townsquare –
- Cherry Hill Mall –
- Menlo Park Mall –
- Newport Centre –
- Quaker Bridge Mall –
- Deptford Mall –
- Moorestown Mall –
- Hamilton Mall –
- The Outlets at Bergen Town Center –
- Bridgewater Commons –
Largest outlet malls
- Tanger Outlets The Walk – Atlantic City, New Jersey – Tanger Outlets –
- Jersey Shore Premium Outlets – Tinton Falls, New Jersey – Simon Property Group –
- Gloucester Premium Outlets – Blackwood, New Jersey – Simon Property Group –
- Jackson Premium Outlets – Jackson, New Jersey – Simon Property Group –
- Liberty Village Premium Outlets – Flemington, New Jersey – Namdar Realty Group –
Former shopping malls
Mall | Location | Gross leasable area | Notes |
American Way Mall | Fairfield | Outlet Mall. | |
Fashion Center | Paramus | 446,000 | Former enclosed mall. Bergen Mall opened in 1967 as a traditional indoor shopping mall. The mall slowly underwent a "de-malling" process over a period of several years prior to 2009, which resulted in the former interior portion of the mall gradually taken over by other stores and eventually sealed off, with each store inside the center having its own outside entrances. It is now known as The Fashion Center and is one of the four malls located in Paramus. |
Burlington Center Mall | Burlington Township | 670,000 | Former enclosed mall. Internal Stores defunct January 12, 2019, Sears closed September 2nd 2019 This mall Shut Down on January 12, 2018 except Sears, which shut down September 2, 2018 |
Cedar Knolls Plaza | Hanover Township | 258,524 | Former enclosed mall. Formerly known as Morris County Mall. Under renovations in 2020 to become a strip mall called Hanover Crossroads. |
Cinnaminson Mall | Cinnaminson | 301,311 | Formed enclosed mall. Redeveloped into a power center called the Shoppes at Cinnaminson in 2009. |
Flemington Mall | Flemington | 239,081 | Formed enclosed mall. Redeveloped into a power center called Flemington MarketPlace in 2003. |
Hackettstown Mall | Hackettstown | 186,124 | Formed enclosed mall. Redeveloped as a power center at 215 Mountain Avenue in 2004. |
Shore Mall | Egg Harbor Township | 635,000 | Former enclosed mall. Redevelopped into a strip mall now called Harbor Square starting in 2010. |
Kinnelon Mall | Butler | 77,000 | Supermarket Stop & Shop occupies a big chunk of the southern half of the structure, and Kinnelon Cinemas has a dedicated entrance on the northern part. The shopping plaza has one small hallway with under ten small businesses in the food and service industries. Became a small local indoor shopping center. |
Ledgewood Mall | Ledgewood | 518,246 | Former enclosed mall. From its opening in 1972 until 2016, it was branded Ledgewood Mall. The realty company and developers involved in the proposed Shops at Ledgewood Commons, a 470,000-square-foot open-air mall on Route 10, are moving forward with plans to open in October 2020. |
Mall at Fashion Plaza | North Brunswick | 429,379 | Formed enclosed mall. Redeveloped as strip mall that is now called North Brunswick Plaza. |
Manalapan Mall | Mount Olive | 460,000 | Former enclosed mall. Converted to power center called Manalapan EpiCentre in 2002. |
Phillipsburg Mall | Phillipsburg | 536,000 | Former enclosed mall. On December 23, 2019, the remaining tenants of Phillipsburg Mall received lease termination letters, telling them they have 30 days to vacate the mall. As of January 24, 2020, there are only seven stores left in the mall, which include Kohl's, Black Rose Antiques, Sports Collectibles, Weight Watchers, Verizon Wireless, Phillipsburg Family Dental, and Bath and Body Works. |
Rio Mall | Rio Grande | 180,000 | Former enclosed mall. Plans revealed in 2019 for the site to be redevelopped as a new retail center called County Commons. |
Seaview Square Mall | Ocean Township | 922,361 | Former enclosed mall. Re-opened as a power center called Seaview Square Shopping Center in 2012. |
Tri-Towne Mall | Marlton | 460,000 | Former enclosed mall. Currently abandonned. |
Village Mall | Willingboro | 228,000 | Village Mall was anchored by Acme Market, Woolco/Caldor, and a twin Eric Theater. Became Grand Marketplace, an indoor food/flea market. |
Wayne Hills Mall | Wayne | 193,288 | Former enclosed mall. Closed in 2010's. Demolition started in 2019 and the site will be transformed into a power center with a ShopRite supermarket. |
Wayne Towne Center | Wayne | 679,985 | Former enclosed mall. Located Next to Willowbrook Mall. De-malled and converted into a power center also called Wayne Towne Center in 2008. |