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Boston Road, Springfield, Massachusetts

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Boston Road is Springfield, Massachusetts 's principal commercial and retail corridor, located on the eastern edge of the city. The Boston Road neighborhood, historically known as Springfield Plain , is named for being a major waypoint on the Boston Post Road system.

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7-516: Boston Road remains a commercial stronghold, home to the Eastfield Mall , various big-box stores , and a movie theater . Springfield city parks, including Five Mile Pond and Loon Pond, provide places to swim, fish, boat, and picnic. The High School of Science & Technology and the controversially renovated Putnam Vocational High School are located in this neighborhood. The neighborhood also features numerous local and chain restaurants and

14-576: A handful of independently owned restaurants and bars. The area was sparsely settled until the 1890s. The first Friendly's Restaurant opened on Boston Road. 42°8′19.6″N 72°30′35.8″W  /  42.138778°N 72.509944°W  / 42.138778; -72.509944 Eastfield Mall The Eastfield Mall was a shopping mall in Springfield, Massachusetts , which was owned by Mountain Development Corporation, and

21-516: A plan to close 36 stores nationwide. The store closed in April 2016. On May 31, 2018, Sears announced that its store would also be closing on September 2, 2018 as part of a plan to close 78 stores nationwide which left the mall with no store anchors. In late June 2020, Cinemark closed permanently. On April 5, 2023, it was announced that the mall would shutter in the summer of 2023 after almost 56 years. The mall closed for good on July 15, 2023. It

28-495: A showroom in the space vacated by Steve & Barry's. In 2004, the mall implemented a teen escort policy, stating that any customer under the age of 15 must be with an escort after 5:00 PM. The JCPenney store was later downgraded to an outlet store , and closed in 2011 when JCPenney eliminated its outlet store division. On January 6, 2016, Macy's announced that it would be closing the Eastfield Mall location as part of

35-420: The mall. Forbes & Wallace closed in 1975 leaving the space vacant, it was eventually sold to JCPenney , which moved into the former space. In 1994, Filene's , whose parent company May Department Stores had bought Steiger's moved into their old space. This store became Macy's in 2006 after May was purchased by Federated Department Stores (Macy's parent company at the time). The 16 screen movie theater

42-493: Was added in August 1999 and was initially a Showcase Cinemas . The theater later became owned by Cinemark . The addition of a Steve & Barry's clothing store in 2006 put the mall at full occupancy for the first time since 1978. The store displaced nine smaller retail outlets, of which only two relocated within the mall. This store closed in 2008 following the chain's bankruptcy proceedings. In 2009, Hannoush Jewelers opened

49-546: Was built in late 1967 by the Rouse Company. The three anchors, JCPenney , Macy's , and Sears closed in 2011, 2016, and 2018, respectively. The movie theater, Cinemark , closed in 2020. The mall was managed by Mountain Development. Eastfield Mall opened in 1968 with three anchors, two of which were local department stores: Forbes & Wallace and Steiger's . The third anchor store, Sears , also opened with

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