Location | Towson, Maryland |
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Coordinates | 39°23′41.5″N 76°34′53″W / 39.394861°N 76.58139°WCoordinates: 39°23′41.5″N 76°34′53″W / 39.394861°N 76.58139°W |
Opening date | 1962 (Eudowood) 1998 (Towson Place) |
Closing date | December 1995 (Eudowood) |
Developer | Food Fair |
Owner | Kimco Realty |
No. of stores and services | 20+ |
No. of anchor tenants | 12 |
Total retail floor area | 679,843 square feet |
No. of floors | 2 |
Towson Place, formerly Eudowood Plaza and Towson Marketplace, is an outdoor shopping center in Towson, Maryland. Opened in 1962, it was redeveloped extensively in 1998. The shopping center's major stores include Target, Walmart, Toys "R" Us, Marshalls, Bed Bath & Beyond, Sports Authority, DSW Shoe Warehouse, PetSmart, Michaels, TJ Maxx, and Havertys. It is managed by Kimco Realty.
Eudowood Plaza opened August 23, 1962. The open-air mall was developed by the supermarket chain Food Fair, which was an anchor store along with Montgomery Ward and Woolworth. A Best Products was added in 1978. The Best building was one of the stores designed by Sculpture in the Environment (SITE) for that chain, featuring a 450-ton masonry facade tilted at a 35-degree angle.
In 1981, Bramalea Ltd. bought the mall. The company spent $9 million to enclose the concourses and add discount retailers. It was at this point that the center was renamed Towson Marketplace. As part of these renovations, the Woolworth store was replaced with Marshalls. Despite these renovations, the mall remained poorly tenanted in the 1990s, and lacked visibility from nearby Joppa Road.
Bramalea sold off the mall in 1991. By December 1995, the mall was under the ownership of Talisman, who proposed to demolish most of the structure. By year's end, the last inline tenants had closed, leaving only Marshalls, Toys "R" Us, Montgomery Ward, Best Products, and Herman's World of Sporting Goods. Four months later, the Best Products store was demolished to make way for construction of a Target. Throughout 1997 and 1998, the center was largely demolished for conversion to a power center, which included PetSmart, Bed Bath & Beyond, Super Fresh, Sports Authority, TJ Maxx, and Michaels along with the existing Montgomery Ward, Toys "R" Us, and Marshalls stores.