Upper Valley Mall


Upper Valley Mall is a shopping mall located near Springfield, Ohio, northeast of Dayton. Built in 1971 by the Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation of Youngstown, the mall features four sit down restaurants, but has no anchor stores. The Upper Valley Mall is located west of Springfield, off US 68, in German Township, Clark County. The mall was owned by Simon Property Group, an Indianapolis, Indiana-based company. It is currently owned by the Clark County Land Reutilization Corporation. The Upper Valley Mall contains of floor space.

History

The Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation built Upper Valley Mall in 1971. At the time, it featured J. C. Penney, Sears, Rike's, and Wren's, a unit of Allied Stores, as its anchors. Another original tenant was an F. W. Woolworth Company dime store, which closed in January 1992.
Elder-Beerman, which replaced the Woolworth, closed in 2013. Old Navy closed at the same time.http://www.springfieldnewssun.com/news/business/economy/more-stores-close-at-mall/nTqZj/
In March 2013, the Dayton Society of Natural History opened a satellite version of their main museum called the Boonshoft Museum of Discovery Springfield in an approximately 4000-square-foot space in the mall, moving to 20,000 square feet in the former Elder-Beerman space in November. On March 25, 2016, DSNH announced that it would close this satellite museum; it did so on April 30.
The mall went into receivership in July 2014.http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/business/economy/bank-files-complaint-seeking-control-of-upper-vall/ngThR/ In spring 2015, Macy's and J. C. Penney closed their stores in the mall.
The mall's cinema, an original tenant, closed on February 20, 2017.
In 2017, the Macy's site was purchased by the Clark County Land Reutilization Corporation, a land bank, for about $200,000. In May 2018, the land bank purchased the rest of the site, exclusive of Sears, from its then-owner, Urban Retail Properties, for slightly more than $3 million.
On December 28, 2018, it was announced that Sears, the last anchor at the mall, would be closing as part of a plan to close 80 stores nationwide. The store closed on March 10, 2019, leaving the mall with no anchors.
It was reported in March 2019 that Home Plate Sports Academy, an existing tenant, would expand and be part of the mall's redevelopment into a mixed-use sports complex including restaurants, retail, a hotel and a movie theater; the project is planned to open in two years.