Hanes Mall
A satellite view of Hanes Mall. | |
| Location | Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 36°04′10″N 80°18′00″W / 36.069386°N 80.300113°W |
| Address | 3320 Silas Creek Parkway |
| Opening date | 1975 |
| Developer | Richard E. Jacobs Group |
| Management | CBL Properties |
| Owner | CBL Properties |
| Stores and services | 170[1] |
| Anchor tenants | 5 (3 open, 2 vacant) |
| Floor area | 1,435,164 square feet (133,331 m2)[1] |
| Floors | 2 (3 in Belk and former Macy's) |
| Parking | Circumnavigatible parking lot with 7,861 spaces |
| Website | shophanesmall |
Hanes Mall is a shopping mall in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It is located on Silas Creek Parkway, off of I-40 via the Stratford Road and Hanes Mall Boulevard exits. Hanes Mall Boulevard, the road named after the mall, has become a very high traffic count area with over 250 businesses stretching over 2.9 miles. The mall has 1,435,164 square feet (133,331 m2) GLA and has 3 anchor stores and over 170 tenants in all.
The current anchor stores are Belk, Dillard's, and JCPenney. There are 2 vacant anchor stores that were last occupied by Macy's and Sears. The Macy's building is now an operations center for Truliant Federal Credit Union, while the Sears building is owned by Novant Health, which plans to expand services from nearby Novant Health Forsyth Medical Center into the building.
Hanes Mall was North Carolina's largest enclosed shopping mall until 2004 when SouthPark Mall in Charlotte finished its expansion project..
History
The original mall, the north wing, was opened on August 6, 1975 with Belk, JCPenney and Sears as anchor stores. In 1990, a new wing was built, expanding the mall southward to include Ivey's (this store was signed as Ivey's but, due to an acquisition by the parent company, opened as Dillard's), Thalhimer's (converted to Hecht's in 1992, and to Macy's in 2006) and a new food court.
Because of this design, one must go through JCPenney to cross from one wing to the other. In addition, the mall is built into the side of a hill; patrons enter through the first floor on the south side of the mall, but must enter on the second floor on the north side. Hanes Mall is two stories throughout, with the exception of Belk and the former Macy's, which each have an additional floor.
The road that loops the mall's parking lot is known as Hanes Mall Circle and is the address for many outlying businesses. There are five roadway entrances into the mall parking lot, one off of Silas Creek Parkway, two off of Hanes Mall Boulevard, and two off of Stratford Road. Hanes Mall also had a four-screen General Cinema movie theater until October 10, 2000; it stood at the spot that is now home to the Texas Roadhouse restaurant. Golden Corral is in what used to be the parking lot next to the theater. Golden Corral has the theater's old address which is 180 Hanes Mall Circle. The theater closed after the lease ended. The theater was at Hanes Mall for 25 years and was one of the original buildings at the mall.
In the late 1980s, the arterial boulevard named after the mall was built. The boulevard had grown to serve as a corridor inside the surrounding commercial district. This also replaced a lengthy portion of nearby local road Vest Mill Road. In 1992, the Interstate 40 rerouting, allowed for a new half diamond interchange connecting Hanes Mall Boulevard to the new interstate stretch to be constructed. This replaced having to exit off at the Silas Creek Parkway with the former Interstate 40 stretch to access the mall. Texas Roadhouse officially opened on September 20, 2004.[2] A Dick's Sporting Goods store would then open two years later in 2006.[3]
A large, working carousel is located on the lower level. The mall is currently owned and operated by CBL & Associates Properties, Inc.
An H&M store opened in November, 2011.[4] This was the second store to open in the Carolinas, the first being in Raleigh.[5]
On November 8, 2018, it was announced that Sears would be closing as part of a plan to close 40 stores nationwide. The store closed in February 2019.[6] Novant Health bought the building and parking areas.[7]
On May 13, 2019, a Dave & Buster's opened in the former Sears wing.[8]
On January 8, 2020, it was announced that Macy's would also be closing as part of a plan to close 29 stores nationwide. The store closed in March 2020.[9]Truliant Federal Credit Union opened an operations center in the former Macy's space in January 2023.[10][11]
Statistical Combined Area
Located in the area southwest of Downtown Winston-Salem; The Hanes Mall District, surrounds Interstate 40, with exits from NC 801 to the west and Hanes Mall Boulevard to the east, alongside US 158 between Bermuda Run to south of Downtown Winston-Salem. Most of the area is urbanized, and is located in the southwestern areas of Winston-Salem, extending to north and central Clemmons and the northern area of Bermuda Run, featuring several hotels, bank locations, large transportation network, retail, healthcare, and further, with Forsyth Medical Center is located inside the district also. Several shopping retailers have locations inside the district, including one Target location, two Walmart Supercenter locations, two Walmart Neighborhood Market locations, one Sam's Club location, two Lowes Foods locations (Clemmons and Bermuda Run), two Harris Teeter locations, one Home Depot location, two Lowe's Home Improvement locations, among others. The area is located mostly south of Salem Parkway and US 421, which is the north line of the district, with Interstate 40 and Silas Creek Parkway being located inside the vicinity of the district.The I-40 and US 421/Salem Parkway junction is located in the center of the district, while the Salem Parkway and Silas Creek Parkway junction is located along the northern line. However, small number of destinations located outside of the lines, can be considered inside the district, with the destinations located directly north of the Jonestown Road, Lewisville-Clemmons Road (in the south outskirts of Lewisville), and Stratford Road exits with US 421, being three of the largest notable examples. Arterial routes inside the district includes, US 158 (Stratford Road and Clemmons Road), Hanes Mall Boulevard, Jonestown Road, Clemmonsville Road, Stafford Village Boulevard, Kinnamon Road, Burke Mill Road, Lewisville-Clemmons Road, Peace Haven Road, among others.[12][11] Located south of the Stratford Road junction with I-40, is the intersection with Stratford Road and Hanes Mall Boulevard, which is the busiest intersection located in the district, alongside nearby and surrounding areas. Exits to the District of I-40 is stretched from exit 180 (NC 801) in Bermuda Run to Exit 190 (Hanes Mall Boulevard). Exits alongside US 421 is from Exit 242 to 235 A. The exits on Silas Creek Parkway are unnumbered, however, they stretch from the Salem Parkway exit to the Bolton Street exit. The district is also located, surrounding Yadkin River, and is in the Muddy Creek Basin.
References
- ^ a b "Hanes Mall". www.cblproperties.com. Retrieved November 6, 2021.
- ^ "Texas Roadhouse to open Monday near Hanes Mall". Winston-Salem Journal.
- ^ "Dick's has large store at the mall". Winston-Salem Journal.
- ^ Staff Reports (June 24, 2011). "Fashion retailer H&M coming to Hanes Mall". Greensboro News & Record. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ JournalNow Staff (June 24, 2011). "Business Briefs: Media General announces furloughs". Winston-Salem Journal. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ Thomas, Lauren; Hirsch, Lauren (November 8, 2018). "Sears to shut 40 more stores early next year". CNBC.
- ^ Craver, Richard (July 14, 2022). "The Briefcase". Winston-Salem Journal.
- ^ "Dave & Buster's opens Monday at Hanes Mall in Winston-Salem".
- ^ "Macy's location at Hanes Mall among nearly 30 stores nationwide shutting down after drop in holiday sales". WXII 12. Hearst Television, Inc. January 8, 2020. Retrieved January 10, 2020.
- ^ Craver, Richard (May 21, 2023). "Hanes Mall's newest tenant is creating a stir - only no one can shop there". Winston-Salem Journal.
- ^ a b John Braiser. [bizjournals.com/triad/news/2022/08/26/clemmons-from-bedroom-to-boomtown.html It Takes A Village] (Map). Triad Business Journal. Retrieved January 25, 2026.
{{cite map}}: Check|url=value (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ [cityofws.org/DocumentCenter/View/18391/G_Prior-Plans-Summary Prior Plans Summary] (Map). Winston-Salem Urban Area. Retrieved February 19, 2026.
{{cite map}}: Check|url=value (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)
External links
- Official website
- CBL & Associates Properties, Inc. Archived 2011-07-08 at the Wayback Machine