Mercury Plaza Mall was a
shopping mall
A shopping mall (or simply mall) is a North American term for a large indoor shopping center, usually anchored by department stores. The term "mall" originally meant a pedestrian promenade with shops along it (that is, the term was used to refe ...
located in
Hampton, Virginia. The shopping mall opened in 1967 as Mercury Plaza. The mall was the
Virginia Peninsula
The Virginia Peninsula is a peninsula in southeast Virginia, USA, bounded by the York River, James River, Hampton Roads and Chesapeake Bay. It is sometimes known as the ''Lower Peninsula'' to distinguish it from two other peninsulas to the n ...
's first indoor shopping complex.
Montgomery Ward
Montgomery Ward is the name of two successive U.S. retail corporations. The original Montgomery Ward & Co. was a world-pioneering mail-order business and later also a leading department store chain that operated between 1872 and 2001. The curren ...
,
Roses and
Giant Open Air Giant Open Air Market was a Norfolk, Virginia-based supermarket chain. Its trademark stores were open 24 hours a day, and the entrance was framed with an arch which rose to over 30 feet, anchored in concrete.
The chain grew to include 26 full-line ...
Supermarket served as the mall's primary anchors.
History
Mercury Plaza was built in 1967. Its first
anchor store was
Roses.
In the mid-1980s, the mall was renamed Mercury Plaza Mall, and Montgomery Ward moved its store to Coliseum Mall. It was replaced by
Home Quarters Warehouse
Home Quarters Warehouse (HQ) was an American chain of " big-box" home improvement stores, originally based in Virginia Beach, Virginia. In 1984, the chemical manufacturing company W.R. Grace & Co. announced its intentions to enter the home improv ...
and
Circuit City.
In 1987, the remaining enclosed portion of the mall was razed, and was replaced with a
Burlington Coat Factory
Burlington, formerly known as Burlington Coat Factory, is an American national off-price department store retailer, and a division of Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corporation with more than 1,000 stores in 40 states and Puerto Rico, with i ...
store. Burlington Coat Factory opened in Mercury Plaza in November 1987, ending Mercury Plaza's status as an enclosed shopping mall. HQ left the complex by end of the 1980s. Roses and Giant (what later became
Farm Fresh) left the shopping center in the early-1990s. Circuit City remained at Mercury Plaza until April 2002, and was the shopping center's only other retailer left except for Burlington Coat Factory.
Mall Properties, based in New York City, owned both Mercury Plaza and Coliseum Mall. The company decided to move Burlington Coat Factory to Coliseum Mall in July 2003. In September 2003, Mercury Plaza shopping center became vacant, and the original building structure was demolished.
References
External links
Deadmalls.com: Mercury Plaza Mall
{{Shopping malls in Virginia
Buildings and structures in Hampton, Virginia
Buildings and structures demolished in 2003
Shopping malls in Virginia
Shopping malls established in 1967
Shopping malls disestablished in 2003
Defunct shopping malls in the United States
Demolished shopping malls in the United States
1967 establishments in Virginia
2003 disestablishments in Virginia