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| Location | Trexlertown, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 40°33′00″N75°35′32″W / 40.5499°N 75.5923°W /40.5499; -75.5923 |
| Opening date | 1973 |
| Management | Cedar Realty Trust |
| Owner | Cedar Realty Trust |
| Stores and services | 21 |
| Floor area | 337,297 sq ft (31,335.9 m2) |
| Floors | 1 |
The Shoppes at Trexler, formerlyTrexler Mall, is an open-air shopping center and former enclosed community shopping mall inTrexlertown, Pennsylvania.
The Trexler Mall opened in 1973. It was not immediately successful, partly because it was built before the surrounding suburbs had developed sufficiently. Over time, however, the mall became more popular and successful.[1][2] Its original anchors were aGrant City discount store, aLaneco department store (signed as LANE), and anA&P Food Market.[3][4][5]
Three years after opening, Grant City closed as part of the W.T. Grant company'sbankruptcy liquidation in 1976.[6] The former Grant City was then leased toHess's Department Stores of Allentown. Business in the mall was hurt in 1985 due to a weeks-long strike by Laneco employees.[7]
The next major change occurred in 1988, when A&P switched banners into aSuper Fresh grocery store. Super Fresh later closed in 1993 due to "extremely poor sales" that were attributed to competition from a much newer and largerRedner's Warehouse Market that had opened down the street in 1990.[8]
In 1994, what remained of the Hess's department store chain was sold off. Hess's trademarks and most of its remaining stores, including the Trexler Mall location, were purchased byThe Bon-Ton Stores, Inc ofYork, PA and were rebranded with the Bon-Ton name in 1995.[9][10] By 1995, the Lane department store at Trexler Mall had closed, leaving Bon-Ton as the only anchor tenant.[1] That same year, however,Giant food stores signed a 20-year lease and began demolishing the former Super Fresh store; a brand new Giant supermarket opened at the site in 1996.[1] The former site of Lane became home to a flea market for some time, then by 2002 it had been leased out to the Health Center at Trexlertown, which is part of theLehigh Valley Health Network.[2]
In 2002, the owners of the mall sought approval from local officials to redevelop much of the mall interior to make way for a newKohl's department store, with a lawyer for the mall owners declaring "We're going through, as the professionals like to say, the de-malling of the Trexler Mall".[2] Over the course of the next year, the Kohl's opened and the remainder of the mall was converted into a strictly open-air strip mall called The Shoppes at Trexler. In 2011, Giant supermarket left the Shoppes at Trexler to open a new facility adjacent to the former mall.[5]Marshalls opened in the former Giant in 2012, though the space was later subdivided so that half would remain Marshalls while the other half becameHomeGoods.
On January 31, 2018, it was announced that The Bon-Ton would be closing as part of a plan to close 42 stores nationwide. The store closed in April 2018.[11] Until it was repainted in early 2018, a water tower behind the plaza remained painted with the words "Trexler Mall" despite the fact that the mall had been defunct for about 15 years prior.[12]
In 2020, the former site of The Bon-Ton will become Urban Air Adventure Park, an indoor amusement park.[13]