Galleria at White Plains

The Galleria at White Plains was a shopping mall located in downtown White Plains, New York, US, a commercial and residential suburb 20 mi north of New York City. The mall featured the major anchors Macy’s and Sears, and junior anchors Forever 21, H&M and Blink Fitness. On December 21, 2022, it was announced that the Galleria at White Plains would permanently close and be replaced with a mixed use site. The mall closed its doors on March 31, 2023 after 43 years.

History
Built by Cadillac Fairview, a Canadian developer, the 900000 sqft, a four-level mall is located on two large city blocks of former urban renewal land. It opened in the summer of 1980 and was the first of three Gallerias to open in the fall of 1980 around the nation, the others being Sherman Oaks and Fort Lauderdale. Its anchor stores were Macy's and Sears, which were relocated to the mall from nearby locations on Main Street to replace the original anchor stores. Abraham & Straus occupied the east anchor spot until converting to Stern's in 1995 and being replaced by Macy's on July 15, 1996. The west anchor JCPenney closed on April 28, 2001, and was left vacant until August 2003 when Sears moved in.

Martin Luther King Blvd. runs directly underneath the mall. The Galleria was constructed adjacent to a large two-block-long parking garage that is connected directly to the mall at various levels. Shopping floors were color-coded blue, green, yellow, and red representing Street Level, Garden Level, the Garden food court area, and Fashion Level 1 and 2, respectively when the mall opened. During the holiday season, the mall's promotional slogan was "We bring more good things to Christmas."

The Galleria underwent a substantial renovation throughout the early-mid 1990s that undid many original elements; the glass elevator is the only significant feature dating from the mall's opening that survives relatively untouched. During the 1990s remodel, the waterfall and stage in the center court were replaced with two miniature fountains between the escalators. In later years, the mall experienced competition from newer and more upscale retail developments, such as The Westchester mall and The Source at White Plains.

On September 18, 2006, Philip Grant, a homeless convicted rapist, was convicted of murder as a hate crime for stabbing Concetta Russo-Carriero to death in a Galleria parking garage on June 29, 2005, because, according to Grant's videotaped confession, she was white with blond hair and blue eyes.

Interior shots of the mall were used in the 2018 film Eighth Grade as well as the 2022 film Somewhere in Queens.

On November 10, 2020, it was announced Sears would close. On January 5, 2021, Macy's announced as part of a strategy to focus on the highest achieving locations that they would be closing.

In November 2022, it was announced that the owners of The Galleria at White Plains were teaming up with two prominent development firms to update the mall as a mixed-use center that will involve both residential development and amenity-based retail. One of the developers, Louis R. Cappelli, has had a presence in White Plains for decades and is known for developing the nearby 46-story Ritz-Carlton towers. On December 21, 2022, PRCP announced that the Galleria at White Plains would close the following March for redevelopment.

The Galleria permanently closed on March 31, 2023. Some of the last stores operating before its closure included Claire's, Famous Footwear, GNC, Jimmy Jazz, Kay Jewelers, LensCrafters, Lids, Cohens Fashion Optical and Rainbow.

In May 2023, the mall was used as the filming location for the internet horror show Generation Loss.

Former anchor stores
East Anchor West Anchor
 * Abraham & Straus (1981-1995)
 * Stern's (1995-1996)
 * Macy's (1996-2021)
 * JCPenney (1981-2001)
 * Sears (2003-2021)

Forever 21

H&M (opened 2001, reopened 2014)