The glass façade of the atrium entrance towers 90 feet (27 m) above the ground.
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Location | Tukwila, Washington, US |
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Coordinates | 47°27′32″N 122°15′29″W / 47.459°N 122.258°WCoordinates: 47°27′32″N 122°15′29″W / 47.459°N 122.258°W |
Opening date | July 31, 1968 |
Developer | Allied Stores |
Management | Westfield Corporation |
Owner | Westfield Corporation |
No. of stores and services | 218 |
No. of anchor tenants | 4 |
Total retail floor area | 1,700,000 sq ft (160,000 m2) |
No. of floors | 1-3 |
Parking | 7,143 |
Website | Official Website |
Westfield Southcenter, formerly known as Southcenter Mall, is a shopping mall located in Tukwila, Washington, US, and owned by the Westfield Group. As of 2008 it was the largest shopping center in Washington and the Pacific Northwest.
The mall is anchored by Macy's, JCPenney, Nordstrom, and Sears.
In early 1956, three officials from Northgate Shopping Center, James Douglas, president of Northgate Co., Wells McCurdy, Douglas' assistant, and Rex Allison, the vice president of Allied Department Stores formed the Southcenter Corporation as a subsidiary of Allied. Their goal was to eventually build a large shopping center south of downtown Seattle that would match the success of their own Northgate and began searching for a site, preferably with at least 100 acres. The site chosen was part of what was known as the Andover Tract, an 800-acre (3.2 km2) area of former pasture land being developed by the Port of Seattle for industrial use. In anticipation of the developments, the entire area (947 acres; 383 ha) was annexed by the city of Tukwila in November 1957. Southcenter Corp. purchased 160 acres (0.65 km2) strategically at what would eventually be the intersection of two major freeways, The Seattle - Tacoma Freeway (I-5) and I-405. The construction schedule of the mall would depend on the construction of the freeways.
Construction at the site began in early 1967 and work on the $30 million shopping center began in the summer of 1967. John Graham & Company, a Seattle firm that also designed the original Northgate and Tacoma Malls, was announced as the architect for the project. Even with four labor strikes slowing work down, construction was largely completed on the structure by May 1968. Work on the interior continued until the day before opening on July 31. In total, 25 main contractors and 50 subcontractors helped build the mall. The concrete terrazzo floors of the mall were said to be the largest in area (85,000 square feet) in all of Puget Sound and were a last minute addition to the mall. Needed to make the cement like mixture for the floors were 500 cubic yards of sand, 3,000 100-pound sacks of gray cement, 3,000 100-pound (45 kg) sacks of white cement and 5,000 100-pound (45 kg) sacks of brown marble chips. 30,000 feet (9,100 m) of zinc divider strips were used for the floors.