List of Saks Fifth Avenue store locations

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

This article details the opening dates of Saks and Co. and Saks Fifth Avenue locations, providing insight into the historic and geographic expansion of the retailer.[1]

   Saks & Co. stores (pre-Saks Fifth Avenue), all closed
   Saks Fifth Avenue stores permanently closed
   Saks Fifth Avenue stores currently in operation
   Saks-34th branches (all converted to Gimbels branches in 1965)
  • Stores opened after 1924 are Saks Fifth Avenue branches except 3 Saks-34th branches indicated as such
  • All stores are/were located in the United States unless otherwise indicated
  • If two store numbers are listed, the first is from the older numbering scheme,[2] the second is from the current scheme.
No.
and
Code
Metropolitan area
("metro")
Suburb or Neighborhood                                  Name/Location/Notes                                  Size Opened Closed
Washington,
D.C.
Downtown Saks & Co. Washington, D.C. (1st location)

525 7th St. N.W. in Avenue House Hotel building[3][4]

450 sq ft (42 m2)[5] 1866
(by Dec.)
1867
(by May 2)[4]
Washington,
D.C.
Downtown Saks & Co. Washington, D.C. (2nd location) May 2, 1867[4] Aug 1885[6][7]
"Clothing and Gents' Furnishing goods", 517 7th Street between D and Pennsylvania.[4] In September 1869, expanded to 2,550 sq ft (237 m2).[8] As of 1870, the building's numbering changed to 316 7th Street. In September 1878, expanded into 318 7th Street.[9]
Washington,
D.C.
Downtown Saks & Co. Washington, D.C. (temporary location)
410 7th St.[10]
Aug 1885[10] Sep 1885[10]
Washington,
D.C.
Downtown Saks & Co. Washington, D.C. (3rd location) 7,400 sq ft (690 m2)[6] Sep 12, 1885[6][7] 1932
300–308 7th St. NW. Building sold to Kann's and Saks withdrew from the Washington, D.C. market.[11]
Richmond,
Virginia
Downtown Saks & Co. Richmond
1013 Main Street in Stearn's Block.
Nov 11, 1876[12] closed
Indianapolis Downtown Saks & Co. Indianapolis Oct 10, 1896[13] Jan 1910[14]
Saks bought the bankrupt Model Clothing Company, located at Ingall's Block (SW corner of Pennsylvania and Washington). Saks remodeled the space, which had been designed by William LeBaron Jenney of Chicago in 1875. Inspired by a building at a World's Fair, the renovated, 4-story store now featured an electrified front entrance with a double archway of copper with four rows of arc lights; 7 large windows, 6 chandeliers and more than 700 lights, making it one of the brightest retail stores in Indianapolis.[15] Saks exited the market in 1910 and sold to W. J. Fischel.
Birmingham,
Alabama[5]
Downtown Saks & Co. Birmingham
Mar 1900 or before[5] closed
Norfolk,
Virginia
Downtown Saks & Co. Norfolk Mar 14, 1900[16] Sep 1919[17]
Sixth city with a Saks store. Branded "Saks and Co." as well as "The Saks Store".[17] 100 Main Street.[16] Expanded March 15, 1900 to two floors at 234-6-8 Main Street.[5] Later located at 330–2 Main Street.[17]
New York City Manhattan Saks & Co. 34th Street
1293–1311 Broadway at 34th Street, Herald Square. After 1965 E. J. Korvette, now Herald Center
1903[18] 1965[18]
001
601
NY
New York City Manhattan New York Saks Fifth Avenue flagship store
611 Fifth Avenue
Sep 15, 1924[19] open
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Palm Beach Palm Beach (1st location)
Shoe, hosiery and handbag store in Hotel Alba. First branch store branded as Saks Fifth Avenue.[20]
Jan 1926[21][22] Spring 1926
Miami–Ft. Lauderdale–W. Palm Beach Palm Beach
("Plaza section")
Palm Beach (2nd location)
300 Worth Avenue (now a Ralph Lauren shop)
15,000 sq ft (1,394 m2)[23] Dec 1, 1926[24] Dec 1, 1979[23]
Atlantic City, New Jersey Downtown Atlantic City
1729 Boardwalk
Jan 31, 1927[22] closed
009[2] New York
metro area
Southampton
(The Hamptons)
Long Island
Southampton
1st location: Resort Store. Opened approx. June 1928.[22]

Last location: 1 Hampton Road, 1970s–2010.

8,700 sq ft (810 m2)[25] (2010) Jun 14, 1928[22] Oct 9, 2010[25][26]
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Miami Beach Miami Beach
830 Lincoln Road. 3 stories.
See images on Wikimedia Commons.
30,000 sq ft (2,787 m2)[23][27] Dec 1929[22][28] closed
Chicago Magnificent
Mile
,
Chicago
Chicago (1st location) 51,000 sq ft (4,700 m2) (1929) Mar 11, 1929[22] 1935[22]
842 N. Michigan Avenue (& Chestnut Street), Holabird & Root, architects; 3 stories, in Michigan-Chestnut Building (built 1927–28). Expanded in October, 1930. Replaced by new 700 N. Michigan location in 1935.[22]
Newport,
Rhode Island[22]
Downtown Newport RI Resort Store
119 Bellvue Ave.
1935[29] closed
020
620
CG
Chicago Magnificent
Mile
Chicago (2nd location)
700 N. Michigan Avenue. 5 stories + basement. Extensive additions and alterations to former Blackstone store.[22]
44,000 sq ft (4,100 m2) Feb 7, 1936 open
Sun Valley
Idaho
[22]
Sun Valley Village[22] Sun Valley Resort Store, Ketchum 1936[22] closed
New York
metro area
Westbury,[22]Nassau Co.,
Long Island
Westbury Resort Store before Oct 1937[22] closed
New York
metro area
Greenwich,
Connecticut[22]
Greenwich (1st location)
E. Putnam & Millbank avenues
5,300 sq ft (490 m2)[22] Oct 21, 1937[22] closed,
replaced[22]
003
603
BH
Los Angeles
metro area
Beverly Hills Beverly Hills (article)
Main store 9600 Wilshire Blvd.
Men's Store 101-119 S. Bedford Dr.
265,000 sq ft (24,600 m2) Apr 25, 1938[22] open
  • 1938 building: The first building at 9600 Wilshire Boulevard had 3 floors, each of either 50x132 ft[30] or 60x180 feet[31] according to different sources. It was designed by Parkinson and Parkinson[32] with interiors by Paul R. Williams.[32][33]
  • 1939 building: On August 21, 1939 the store expanded to its west into a new 60 ft × 132 ft (18 m × 40 m) five-story building[30] by architect Paul R. Williams[30] with interiors by Paul R. Williams and Tom Douglas.[30]
  • 1940/1948 extensions: The store was expanded and redesigned between 1940 and 1948 to about 74,000 sq ft (6,900 m2) with ca. 500 employees.[34]
  • 1990s addition (Women's Shoes): In the 1990s, the store added a single-story building immediately to the west, which long housed the women's shoe department.[35]
  • Men's Store in former I. Magnin: In 1995, SFA Beverly Hills opened a new Men's Store in the 54,000 sq ft (5,000 m2) Timothy Pflueger-designed former I. Magnin store, one block to the west at 101–119 S. Bedford Drive on the corner of Bedford.[36]
  • 9600 building closing, Women's Store move: As of 2023, Saks plans to close the 9600 Wilshire complex, which is made up of the 1938 3-story building, the 1939 5-story building including the 1940s additions to both, and the single-story 1990 building. The space will be converted to offices, apartments, and smaller retail stores. The Women's store there will move to the 9570 Wilshire building, previously a Barneys location. The Men's Store will remain at the former I. Magnin building a block west.[35]
New York
metro area
Eatontown,
New Jersey
Eatontown military uniform shop
Served Fort Monmouth
1942[37] closed
Detroit New Center Detroit
7470 Second Avenue. 2 stories + basement, parking for 200 cars[22]
80,000 sq ft (7,400 m2)[22] Sep 3, 1940[22] closed
New York
metro area
New Haven,
Connecticut
[22]
New Haven military uniform shop
996 Chapel St., Navy and Army shop[22]
1942 (about)[22] closed
Princeton,
New Jersey
[22]
Downtown Princeton military uniform shop, then University Shop
46 Nassau St.[22]
Nov 1, 1944[22] closed
Petoskey,
Michigan
Petoskey Resort Store
215 Howard Street.[38] Open summers only.
Jun 14, 1947[39][38]
Sep 9, 1974[40]
New York
metro area
New Haven,
Connecticut
New Haven University Shop
290 York Street.[22]
3,613 sq ft (336 m2)[22] Oct 9, 1948[22] closed
017
PT
Pittsburgh Downtown Pittsburgh
6th floor of Gimbels Bldg., 345 6th Ave.,[22] 20,000 sq ft (1,900 m2). In mid-1970s moved to ca. 85,000 ft2 location at Gimbel's Bldg., Smithfield St. at Oliver.[41]
85,000 sq ft (7,900 m2) Sep 1949[22] closed
Philadelphia Center City Philadelphia 54,000 sq ft (5,000 m2)[42] Apr 14, 1952[22] 1967[42]
Chestnut at 9th streets,[22] occupying the ground floor of the Gimbels office building in the Gimbels store complex. Closed due to building modernization.[42] Replaced two years later by SFA Bala Cynwyd.
044
FT
Miami–
Fort Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Fort
Lauderdale
Fort Lauderdale
Sunrise Center, now The Galleria at Fort Lauderdale. 10,000 sq. ft. at launch, expanding to 30,000 by 1980, 1980 expansion to 84,000.[43]
84,000 sq ft (7,804 m2) Jan 18, 1954[43] Jul 20, 2008[44]
046
SF
San Francisco Union Square San Francisco (1st location) 61,500 sq ft (5,714 m2)[45] Feb 5, 1952[22] Aug 1981
Grant Ave. at Maiden Lane (1952–1991). Previously Hale Bros. Women's Clothing store (1946-1952).[46] $500,000 remodeling by Burke & Kober, Louis XV interiors in cooperation with W. & J. Sloane. 3 stories plus basement. Replaced by Post Street store.
New York
metro area
White Plains,
Westchester Co.
White Plains (1st location)
Maple Ave. at Bloomington Rd.
Expanded from 70,000–128,000 sq ft (6,500–11,900 m2).[41][47]
128,000 sq ft (11,900 m2)[41][47] 1954[21] 1990s
St. Louis Central
West End
St. Louis (1st location)
Maryland at York. Replaced by Plaza Frontenac store.
48,000 sq ft (4,500 m2)[41] 1956[48] 1973[48]
New York
metro area
Massapequa Park,
Nassau Co.,
Long Island
Saks-34th Massapequa Park branch
Bar Harbour Shopping Center
Merrick Lane at Harbour Lane[49]
Converted to Gimbels July 12, 1965.[50]
4,000 sq ft (372 m2)[49] Oct 7, 1956[49] Jul 12, 1965[50][51]
New York
metro area
Springfield,
Union Co.,
New Jersey
Springfield
Millburn Av. at Short Hills Ave., Springfield.[22] In 1994, Saks closed Springfield and opened a new store at The Mall at Short Hills where Bonwit Teller had closed.
67,000 sq ft (6,200 m2)[41] Aug 20, 1957[22] Sep 1994 (approx.)
Boston
metro area
Cambridge,
Massachusetts
Cambridge University Shop
79 Mt. Auburn Ave.[22]
Serving Harvard University.
1957[22] closed
New York
metro area
Stamford,
Connecticut
Saks-34th Stamford branch
Converted to Gimbels July 12, 1965.[50]
37,000 sq ft (3,437 m2) Apr 28, 1958[52] Jul 12, 1965[50]
040
SE
Chicago
metro area
Skokie,
Illinois
Old Orchard
Old Orchard Shopping Center.
Orig. 58,000 sq ft (5,400 m2) (1958)[41][22]
72,000 sq ft (6,700 m2) (2005)[53] Nov 6, 1958[22] Jul 2005[53]
Los Angeles/
Inland Empire
Palm Springs Palm Springs (1st location)
Palm Canyon Dr. at Ramon Dr.[22]
Oct 16, 1959[22] replaced
Detroit
metro area (CSA)
Ann Arbor,
Michigan
Ann Arbor University Shop
332 S. State Street.
University Shop serving University of Michigan community.
21st SFA store at time of opening.
Aug 15, 1960[54][55] closed
New York
metro area
Commack,
Long Island
New York
Saks-34th Commack branch
Commack Shopping Center, Jericho Turnpike.
Designed by Copeland, Novak & Assoc.
Converted to Gimbels July 12, 1965.[50]
42,000 sq ft (3,902 m2)[56] Aug 26, 1960[56] Jul 12, 1965[50]
New York
metro area
Garden City,
Nassau Co.,
Long Island[57]
Garden City
Freestanding
100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2) Mar 26, 1962[58] 2004 (announced)[57]
San Francisco
Bay Area
Palo Alto,
California
Palo Alto
Stanford Shopping Center[41]
1962[41] closed
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Surfside Surfside
9699 Harding Avenue. 23rd SFA store to open.[59]
9,000 sq ft (840 m2) Nov 12, 1962 closed
026
626
PX
Phoenix Biltmore
District
Phoenix
Biltmore Fashion Park. Moved within the mall; opened in former I. Magnin space on March 23, 1995.[60][61] Originally 60,000 sq ft (5,600 m2) (1963).[60]
90,000 sq ft (8,400 m2) (1995)[60] Sep 1963 open
San Diego La Jolla Village[62][57] La Jolla (1st location)
7600 Girard Av. (freestanding, same block as I. Magnin). Replaced by Wall St. store in 1998.[57]
Dec 2, 1963[63] closed
023
623
CC
Washington,
D.C. metro area
Chevy Chase,
Maryland
Chevy Chase
5555 Wisconsin Av. (freestanding, Main Store), Mazza Gallerie Men's Store (#674 CV) moved to main store in 2020
Aug 17, 1964[22] open
028
628
TR
Detroit
metro area
Troy,
Michigan
Troy
Somerset Mall (South). At launch, it was the 27th SFA store, store manager: Joel E. Rath. Orig. 70,000 sq ft (6,503 m2).[64] In late 1998, expanded by 40,000 sq ft and added a parking structure.[65]
110,000 sq ft (10,219 m2)[65] (1998) Apr 14, 1967[41][66] open
029
629
AT
Atlanta Buckhead Atlanta
Phipps Plaza
Aug 1968[41] open
031
631
BC
Philadelphia
metro area
Bala Cynwyd Bala Cynwyd
At Decker Square/Bala Plaza. 28th SFA store when opened. 3 stories. Parking for 1400 cars.
105,000 sq ft (9,755 m2)[67] Aug 1969[41] open
030
630
BN
Boston Downtown Boston Boston
The Shops at Prudential Center (Main Store). See also Men's Store opened 2020, below.[68]
1971[69] open
Monterey Co.,
California
Monterey Monterey
Del Monte Center[41]
1972[41] closed
Houston Uptown/
Post Oak
Houston (1st location)
Saks Fifth Avenue Center of Fashion (shopping center), later names were Pavilion Saks Fifth Avenue and Pavilion at Post Oak, 1800 Post Oak Bl.
240,000 sq ft (22,000 m2) 1972[70] September 3, 1997
039
639
FR
St. Louis
metro area
Frontenac Frontenac
Plaza Frontenac
1973[48] open
Los Angeles/
San Fernando
Valley
Woodland
Hills
Woodland Hills
Woodland Hills Promenade.[41] Damaged in 1994 Northridge earthquake; Saks decided not to repair/reopen.[71] Demolished and replaced by AMC Theatres.[72]
Oct 1973 Jan 11, 1994[71]
037
637
BA
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Bal Harbour Bal Harbour
Bal Harbour Shops
76,000 sq ft (7,061 m2)[23] 1976[41] open
038
638
BY
New York
metro area
Bergen Co.,
New Jersey
Bergen County
Riverside Square Mall
Feb 1977[41][21] closed
041
641
BW
Cleveland Beachwood Beachwood
Beachwood Place[41]
1978[41] open
036
636
SC
Los Angeles/
Orange Co.
Costa Mesa South Coast Plaza
South Coast Plaza. Official name in store listings was "Coast Plaza", for internal purposes in order to avoid confusion with the nearby "South Orange County" store (cf.).
105,000 sq ft (9,800 m2)[41] 1979[41] open
043
643
PL
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Palm Beach Palm Beach (3rd location)
The Esplanade mall, now 150 Worth.[41]
35,000 sq ft (3,252 m2)[23] Dec 1, 1979[23][41] open
042
FE
Detroit
metro area
Dearborn,
Michigan
Fairlane
Fairlane Town Center. Closed and converted to Saks Off Fifth.
Feb 23, 1980[73] Jan 2002[74]
045
645
LV
Las Vegas Las Vegas
Strip
Las Vegas
Fashion Show Mall
1981
(by Sept.)[75]
open
046
646
SF
San Francisco Union Square San Francisco (2nd location)
384 Post Street. Replaced Grant St. store.[45]

Separate Men's Store (35,000 sqft, 2 floors) at 220 Post St. Aug 1997[76]–Oct 2016.[77]

131,000 sq ft (12,200 m2)[45] Aug 13, 1981[22] open
047
OK
Chicago
metro area
Oak Brook,
Illinois
Oakbrook
Oakbrook Center. 32nd SFA store at the time; SFA aimed to have 50 stores by 1999.[75]
92,000 sq ft (8,500 m2)[75] Sep 12, 1981[75] Dec 31, 2002[78]
049
DL
Dallas–
Ft. Worth
North Dallas Dallas
Dallas Galleria. Orig. 102,000 sq ft (9,500 m2) (1st site).[79]
Moved to larger site within the mall, former Marshall Fields, opening September 16, 1999.[79]
175,000 sq ft (16,300 m2) (2nd site)[79] 1982[79] closed
048
KC
Kansas City Kansas City
Country Club Plaza
Aug 28, 1982[80] Feb 2005[80]
018
CN
Cincinnati Downtown Cincinnati
101 W. 5th St. Renovated in 1996 and 2003.[81]
77,000 sq ft (7,200 m2) 1983[81] 2022[82]
008
608
NO
New Orleans Central
Business
District
New Orleans
The Shops at Canal Place
1983 (approx.)[83] open
032
632
DA
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Dadeland Dadeland
Dadeland Mall
1983 open
Houston Alief, Houston West Oaks
West Oaks Mall
1983 May 1, 1990[84]
056 ST[2] New York
metro area
Downtown Stamford CT Stamford
Stamford Town Center
Converted to a Saks Off Fifth.
Mar 12, 1983 early 2014[85]
Baltimore Owings Mills Baltimore
Owings Mills Mall
1984 1996[86]
057
657
SA
San Antonio Uptown Loop San Antonio
North Star Mall
1985 open
Los Angeles/
Inland Empire
Palm Springs Palm Springs (2nd location)
Desert Fashion Plaza
1985[87] 2001 or −2[88]
021
621
TL
Tulsa Tulsa
Utica Square
48,000 sq ft (4,500 m2)[89] 1986 open
006
CL
Monterey Co.,
California
Carmel Carmel
Carmel Plaza[57][90]

Added former I. Magnin space in 1995[61]

May 1986 announced 2004[57]
004
604
TY
Washington,
D.C. metro
Tysons,
Virginia
Tysons II
Tysons Galleria
Oct 6, 1988[91] open
005
MN
Minneapolis Nicollet Mall,
Downtown
Minneapolis
Gaviidae Common. Converted to a Saks Off Fifth
84,000 sq ft (7,800 m2)[92] 1989[92] 2005[93]
016
DN
Denver Cherry Creek Denver
Cherry Creek Shopping Center
Aug 17, 1990[94] Mar 2011[95]
014
PD
Portland,
Oregon
[96]
Downtown Portland
Pioneer Place (freestanding)
1990[97] 2010[96]
010
610
NP
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Palm Beach Gardens Palm Beach Gardens
The Gardens Mall. 75,000 sq ft (7,000 m2) (1990),[44] Expanded 2008.[44]

110,000 sq ft (10,000 m2) (2008)[44]

1990 open
015
WP
New York
metro area
White Plains White Plains (2nd location)
Freestanding store on Mamaroneck Avenue. Demolished 2003, now site of City Center mall.[98]
100 employees when closing announced 2001.
128,000 sq ft (11,892 m2)[99] Early 1990s[47] Jan 1, 2002 (approx.)[88]
069
669
NS
Naples,
Florida
Naples
Waterside Shops
1992[100] open
078
SL
New York
metro area
Short Hills,
New Jersey
Short Hills
The Mall at Short Hills. Took over former Bonwit Teller space. Replaced SFA's Springfield store.
107,000 sq ft (9,941 m2)[101] Nov 1996 (approx.) Sep 2016 (approx.)
085
FV
San Diego Mission Valley Fashion Valley
Fashion Valley.[96] Space was a Buffums 1969–1991, then I. Magnin 1991–1995.[102] Now a Forever 21.
81,000 sq ft (7,500 m2) 1995[96] 2010[96]
087
CH
Charleston
South Carolina
Downtown Charleston
King Street. 46th SFA store. "Main Street Store" format.
30,000 sq ft (2,800 m2) Sep 1996[103] closed
072
672
GW
New York
metro area
Greenwich, Connecticut The Saks Shops at Greenwich[104]
205 Greenwich Avenue in former Woolworth Building. 47th SFA store. "Main Street Store" format.[103]
35,000 sq ft (3,300 m2)[103] Sep 7, 1996[103][105] open
092
644
FF
Fort Myers,
Florida
Fort Myers
Bell Tower Shops
40,000 sq ft (3,700 m2) Nov 8, 1996[106] Oct 2016[107][108]
089
OF
Orlando Orlando
The Florida Mall
101,000 sq ft (9,400 m2)[109] Nov 22, 1996[109] Mar 2014[110]
090
SR
Tampa Bay Sarasota Sarasota (1st location)
Southgate Plaza, S. Tamiami Trail. "Resort Store" format.[111] Converted to a Saks Off Fifth.
40,000 sq ft (3,700 m2)[111] 1996 Oct 2012
070
HH
Hilton Head,
South Carolina
Hilton Head
The Mall at Shelter Cove. Women's and Men's. No Children's or Home Furnishings.[112] Converted to a Saks Off Fifth.[113]
40,000 sq ft (3,700 m2)[112] Mar 21, 1997[112] 2004 or 2005
converted to Off 5th
034
634
HO
Houston Uptown Houston-Galleria (2nd location)
Replaced Pavilion/Center of Fashion/Post Oak store. The Galleria. Renovated 2016, design by CBX Agency (New York).
207,000 sq ft (19,200 m2)[79] Sep 11, 1997 open
Houston Memorial City Houston-Town & Country
Former Marshall Fields store.[79]
Sep 19, 1997[79] closed
227
LJ
San Diego La Jolla
Village
La Jolla (2nd location)
1055 Wall Street. "Main Street" store.
47,500 sq ft (4,410 m2) 1997[114] Feb 2005[115]
202
AU
Austin NW Austin
Great Hills/
Arboretum
Austin
Arboretum Market.
55,000 sq ft (5,100 m2)[116][117] Nov 11, 1997[117] Dec 31, 2012[116]
253
TM
Tampa Bay Westshore,
Tampa
Tampa
WestShore Plaza
100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2)[118] Nov 12, 1998[118] 2013[110]
252
PS
Los Angeles/
San Gabriel
Valley
Pasadena Pasadena
Freestanding
Dec 1998[119][120] 2004 (announced)[57]
San Francisco
Bay Area
Danville CA Danville
Shops at Blackhawk Plaza. Closed after less than a year.[121][114]
42,000 sq ft (3,900 m2) 1998[114] 1999[122]
207
607
SB
Santa Barbara Downtown Santa Barbara
State Street[114]
1998[114] closed
675
CO
Columbus,
Ohio
northern
suburbs
Columbus
Polaris Fashion Place
Nov 2001[123] open
212
612
PA
Los Angeles/
Inland Empire
Palm Desert Palm Desert
The Gardens on El Paseo
1999[124] open
254
654
WW
New York
metro area
Huntington
Station, N.Y.
Long Island[125]
Walt Whitman Shops
1999 open
024
624
BR
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Boca Raton Boca Raton
Town Center at Boca Raton. When opened, 75,000 sq ft (6,968 m2), SFA's 44th store. Moved to a larger 143,000-sq.-ft. space within the mall in 1999.
143,000 sq ft (13,285 m2) (1999)[126] Oct 31, 1986[127] open
635
MV
Los Angeles/
Orange Co.
Mission Viejo South Orange County
The Shops at Mission Viejo[57]
1999[128] 2004 (announced)[57]
284
BG[2]
San Francisco
Bay Area
Burlingame,
California
Burlingame (never opened)
Planned in 2000 for 1420 Burlingame Ave., formerly a Montgomery Ward. Cancelled because city required Saks provide more parking.[129]
2000 (planned) never opened
667
HK
Chicago
metro area
Highland Park,
Illinois
Highland Park
650 Elm Place. Demolished. Today site of Albion II apartments.
49,000 sq ft (4,600 m2) 2000[130] Dec 31, 2012[130]
650
PC
Los Angeles/
South Bay
Palos Verdes Palos Verdes
Avenue of the Peninsula[57]
Sep 2000[131] May 13, 2006[131]
651
FW
Dallas–
Ft. Worth
Hurst,
NE Tarrant Co.
Fort Worth
North East Mall.[57]
100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2) Sep 14, 2000[132] Sep 16, 2006[133]
613
BI
Birmingham,
Alabama
Birmingham
The Summit
100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2)[134] 2001[134] open
Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
Olaya Street Riyadh
Kingdom Centre[135][136]
Nov 2001[135] 2010[135]
679
IP
Indianapolis Indianapolis
The Fashion Mall at Keystone
2002 open
671
RI
Richmond,
Virginia
Richmond
Stony Point Fashion Park
2003 open
673
RA
Raleigh,
North Carolina
Raleigh
Triangle Town Center
2004 open
Dubai,
U.A.E. United Arab Emirates
Bur Dubai Dubai
BurJuman Centre[137]
80,000 sq ft (7,400 m2)[137] 2005[137] 2016[137]
Mexico City Mexico Santa Fe Santa Fe
Centro Santa Fe
150,000 sq ft (14,000 m2) Nov 28, 2007[138] Oct 2023
Manama,
Bahrain Bahrain
City Centre Bahrain
City Centre Bahrain Mall
Nov 2008[139] open
Dubai,
U.A.E. United Arab Emirates
Jumeirah
Beach
Dubai Men's Store
The Walk. Men's Store.[137]
2008[137] 2010
Mexico City Mexico Polanco Polanco
Plaza Carso
82,500 sq ft (7,660 m2) Oct 21, 2010[140] 2020 (Q3)[141]
Almaty,
Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
Almaty
Esentai Mall
91,000 sq ft (8,500 m2) Oct 2012[142] open[143]
090
633
SR
Tampa Bay Sarasota Sarasota (2nd location)
The Mall at University Town Center. Replaced 1996 Sarasota "Resort Store".
Oct 15, 2012[144] open
8356 Toronto,
ON Canada Canada
Downtown Toronto
176 Yonge Street in part of the Hudson's Bay Queen Street building.
150,000 sq ft (14,000 m2) 2015[145] open
San Juan,
Puerto Rico
San Juan
Mall of San Juan. Destroyed by hurricane and not reopened.
Mar 2015 Sep 2017 (destroyed)
Honolulu Waikīkī Honolulu
International Market Place
Aug 25, 2016[146] Aug 2022[147]
8357 Toronto,
ON Canada Canada
Sherway
Gardens
Sherway Gardens
Sherway Gardens, included food hall by Pusateri's
143,194 sq ft (13,303 m2) Feb 2016[148] open
New York City Battery
Park City
,
Manhattan
Brookfield Place
Brookfield Place. 3-level 86,000 sq ft women's store (closed 2019) and 16,000 sq ft men's store (closed 2020).[149]
102,000 sq ft (9,500 m2) Sep 9, 2016[150] 2019
or 2020[149][151]
668
BL
Miami–
Ft. Lauderdale–
W. Palm Beach
Brickell,
Miami
Brickell
Brickell City Centre
107,550 sq ft (9,992 m2)[152] Nov 3, 2016[153] open
Calgary,
AB Canada Canada
Manchester, Calgary Calgary
CF Chinook Centre in space that had been Zellers then Target[154]
115,425 sq ft (10,723 m2)[155] Feb 22, 2018[156] open
Boston Back Bay Boston Men's Store
Previously a Barneys.[68]
Aug 14, 2020[68] open
New York
metro area
East Rutherford,
New Jersey
New Jersey[157]
Anchors The Avenue, a 300,000 sq ft (27,871 m2) wing in the megamall with about 20 luxury shops. Currently the only SFA in New Jersey.
113,000 sq ft (10,498 m2)[158] Sep 17, 2021 open

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]

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