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King of Prussia (shopping mall)
Shopping mall in Pennsylvania, US
Shopping mall in Pennsylvania, US
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | King of Prussia Mall |
| logo | King of Prussia mall logo.svg |
| logo_width | 230 |
| image | King of Prussia Mall entrance between Neiman Marcus and Macy's.jpg |
| caption | King of Prussia entrance between Neiman Marcus and Macy's in January 2017 |
| location | King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
| address | 160 North Gulph Road |
| coordinates | |
| opening_date | |
| developer | Morris A. Kravitz and The Kravco Co. |
| manager | Simon Property Group |
| owner | Simon Property Group |
| number_of_stores | 450 |
| number_of_anchors | 6 |
| floor_area | 2793200 sqft |
| floors | 3 (Court on levels 1-2, Plaza on levels 2-3, 3 in Bloomingdale's, Macy's, Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom, and former JCPenney) |
| parking | 5 parking lots, 3 parking garages, valet parking with 13,376+ spaces |
| publictransit | SEPTA bus: at the King of Prussia Transit Center |
| The Rambler | |
| website |
The Rambler
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King of Prussia, colloquially known as the King of Prussia Mall and sometimes shortened to K.O.P., is a shopping mall located in the community of King of Prussia in Upper Merion Township, Pennsylvania. It is the largest shopping mall in Pennsylvania and the fourth-largest shopping mall in the United States in terms of gross leasable area. It is an upscale mall with 450 retailers.
The mall opened in 1963, with a complex that became known as The Plaza at King of Prussia. A second, entirely separate complex, The Court at King of Prussia, opened adjacent to it in 1981. In 2016, a major expansion, now known as The Connector, was completed, connecting the two buildings and creating one large shopping mall.
Location
King of Prussia mall is located in the census-designated place of King of Prussia, in Upper Merion Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, 20 mi northwest of Philadelphia. The mall is near the convergence of four major highways: the Schuylkill Expressway (Interstate 76), the Pennsylvania Turnpike (Interstate 76/Interstate 276), U.S. Route 202, and U.S. Route 422.
SEPTA Suburban Division bus routes , , , , , and serve the King of Prussia mall at the King of Prussia Transit Center along with other stops in the mall complex. These bus routes provide service to the West Chester Transit Center in West Chester, the Norristown Transit Center in Norristown, Phoenixville, the 69th Street Transit Center in Upper Darby, Center City Philadelphia, Chesterbrook, Valley Forge, and Limerick. The Greater Valley Forge Transportation Management Association operates The Rambler, a community shuttle around Upper Merion Township that has two stops at the King of Prussia mall.
The mall has several outparcels, and several luxury and affordable hotels are nearby. Lockheed Martin has a campus overlooking the mall area. The town center is part of the Village at Valley Forge, a 122-acre mixed-use development under construction that consists of retail, apartments, townhouses, condominiums, office space, and the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's Specialty Care and Surgery Center.
Description

King of Prussia mall is anchored by Nordstrom, Macy's, Neiman Marcus, Bloomingdale's, Dick's Sporting Goods, Eataly, Netflix House, and Primark and contains a diverse merchant mix of over 450 stores, including a collection of luxury retailers. The mall is owned and managed by Simon Property Group of Indianapolis. A selection of international dining options are available at two food courts and in multiple casual and fine dining establishments.
The mall is a prominent tourist destination in the Philadelphia area, with an estimated 20% of visitors as tourists. Several nearby hotels offer mall tourist packages, which typically include mall gift cards. Due to the mall's size, several retailers rent more than one space.
A covered outdoor walkway used to connect Macy's and Neiman Marcus prior to the recent expansion in 2016. The eastern portion of the mall (originally known as the Court) has two anchor stores, Macy's and Bloomingdale's. It originally had a third anchor, Abraham & Straus, which sold its store in 1988 to Strawbridge & Clothier, which subsequently relocated to the former Wanamaker's location at The Plaza in 1996 upon its acquisition by May Department Stores. Its spot was redeveloped as the Pavilion at King of Prussia. Stores in this section include a double-level Urban Outfitters, Old Navy, and The Cheesecake Factory.
In 2018, King of Prussia was valued at $2.77 billion and had sales per square foot of $773, making it the 8th most valuable mall in the United States.
History

1960s
The first portion of what was then named King of Prussia Plaza opened on September 18, 1962, as a modest open-air shopping mall. It consisted of an "A-Frame"-style Acme supermarket and a 172,000 sq ft, 2-story E. J. Korvette discount department store. The mall carried an American Colonial theme, due to its proximity to the Revolutionary War encampment at Valley Forge State Park.
The mall expanded rapidly over the next few years. On August 15, 1963, a 152,000 sq ft, 3-story JCPenney anchor store was opened, along with 14 adjacent inline stores. A grand opening that day was attended by Morris A. Kravitz, developer of the mall and W.M. Batten, president of the J.C. Penney company. Batten cut a ribbon opening the store, while the managers of the other 14 new stores cut ribbons surrounding it. 6 more inline stores opened a week later, on August 22, followed by five more in September and five more in October. Among the inline stores was a 46,000 sq ft Woolworth's.
The 1400-seat Stanley Warner Plaza Theatre cinema opened on May 19, 1965, showing the Charlton Heston epic Major Dundee as its first feature. A John Wanamaker anchor store opened on August 16, 1965, in a striking 194,000 sq ft, 3-level octagonal structure. Gimbels opened a 229,000 sq ft, 3-level anchor store on May 2, 1966.
1970s
By the 1970s, the mall was the largest shopping center in the east, with over 1 million sq ft, over 100 stores and parking for 27,000 cars. It consisted of a small, fully enclosed section (connecting the three department stores) and a sprawling outdoor mall.
1980s
On August 6, 1981, Kravco, the mall's parent company, opened a second sister mall, The Court at King of Prussia, directly across the street. The combined size of the two malls was 2.4 million sq ft. The Court was fully enclosed, anchored by Bamberger's (which had opened before the new mall, on March 12, 1981), Bloomingdale's, and Abraham & Straus (A&S).
Korvettes closed on December 24, 1980. It was demolished and replaced by a food court and a 212,000 sq ft 2-story Sears "store of the future" anchor, which opened on July 25, 1983. Sears had moved from the Logan Square shopping center in nearby Norristown.

In the 1980s, The Plaza featured Herman's World of Sporting Goods, and a Lionel "Kiddie City" toy store. The Plaza also featured two 1980s style video arcades, each named Spaceport, and the RKO Stanley Warner (later Sam Eric, and then United Artists Plaza) movie theater which, in an era before multiplexes, had only one extra large 70 m screen.
Gimbel's closed in June 1986 and was replaced with Stern's. Bamberger's was renamed Macy's on October 7 of that year. Abraham & Straus closed in 1987 and was replaced with Strawbridge & Clothier in 1988.
1990s
Stern's was replaced with JCPenney in 1992, moving from their original building in the middle of the Plaza, which was turned into mall space. Alongside this, the anchor space was converted to a 2-level shopping space, with its original third level being closed to the public and converted to office and storage space.
Further expansion took place in the early 1990s. During this process, the oldest portions of The Plaza were demolished and replaced and the two malls, The Court and The Plaza, were connected by a pedestrian bridge and walkway. Marketing from then on presented them as a united entity. The new Plaza was fully enclosed and had two levels throughout. The rebuilt Plaza celebrated its grand opening on November 2, 1995. Three new anchor stores were added. Lord & Taylor opened in the fall of 1995, while Neiman Marcus opened on February 24, 1996 and Nordstrom opened that spring.
In June 1995, Wanamaker's went bankrupt. After early reports that they might be sold to Boscov's, the chain was instead sold to May Department Stores, which rebranded all Wanamaker's as Hecht's, their Baltimore-Washington regional nameplate. The Plaza's John Wanamaker store was renamed Hecht's on September 3, 1995.
In April 1996, Strawbridge & Clothier was sold to May Department Stores as well. They renamed the store Strawbridge's and rebranded their Hecht's at The Plaza, after only a year, as Strawbridge's, in addition to the existing Strawbridge's at The Court. Woolworth's closed in 1997. The Strawbridge's at The Court closed in January 1999.
2000s
In 2001, the former Abraham & Straus/Strawbridge's building at The Court was converted into a mall expansion named "The Pavilion."
In 2006, May Department Stores dissolved Strawbridge's and their remaining anchor store at The Plaza (the former Wanamaker's) became a second Macy's anchor store, before closing the following year.
The mall served as the home of the Philadelphia Freedoms tennis team of World TeamTennis in 2008 and 2009. Whenever a tennis event was to occur, a temporary tennis stadium that seated 3,000 was constructed in the parking lot of the Bloomingdale's anchor store. The Freedoms left for The Pavilion at Villanova University in 2010.
2010s
In 2011, Simon increased its ownership of the King of Prussia mall from 12.4 percent to 96 percent, buying Lend Lease's 50 percent ownership of the mall. Lend Lease had bought its stake in the mall in 1996, with Kravco, Simon, and three family trusts owning the remaining 50 percent at the time.
The Macy's building at the Plaza and adjacent parking garage were demolished in fall 2011, to make way for over 100000 sqft of retail space and additional parking.
On November 29, 2011, Simon Property Group announced plans to create an additional 140000 sqft expansion/connector to connect The Court and The Plaza. This new retail connector features 50 stores, restaurants with an upscale dining pavilion, and a customer lounge. Upon completion, this project made King of Prussia mall the largest official shopping mall in the United States (larger than Mall of America in overall square footage, though not in quantity of shops), and placed the mall under one roof for the first time in its existence. The 155000 sqft expansion also includes a new parking garage "with speed ramps, space location technology and valet service." Construction on this expansion was estimated to cost $150 million. Several outparcels were also proposed for this expansion.

On November 18, 2014, construction began on the expansion to connect The Court and The Plaza. The Connector opened August 18, 2016, with two ribbons joined from The Court and The Plaza. Simon Property Group COO Rick Sokolov and U.S. Representative Brendan Boyle were present for the ribbon tying ceremony.
In January 2014, Sears announced that it would sublease some of its space to Dick's Sporting Goods. Sears closed this location entirely in early December 2014. It was announced that Irish retailer Primark would be on the first level of its space while Dick's Sporting Goods would take parts of the second level. The Primark store opened on November 25, 2015. In 2015, Sears Holdings spun off 235 properties, including the Sears at King of Prussia, into Seritage Growth Properties. Portions of the former Sears Auto Center are now Nan Xiang Soup Dumplings and Yard House. On March 17, 2017, JCPenney announced that its store would be closing as part of a plan to close 138 stores nationwide; the store closed on July 31, 2017.
The western section of the mall (also known as The Plaza) went under renovation in April 2018, which added new flooring and handrails, LED lighting, and additional soft seating areas and restrooms. The renovation was completed in May 2019.
On October 5, 2019, Happy Place opened on the second floor of the former JCPenney building. It left on February 29, 2020, as part of a national tour.
2020s

On May 3, 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Montgomery County opened a COVID-19 vaccination site in the former JCPenney space, which has since shut down.
In June 2022, it was announced that Wayfair, an online retailer of furniture and home goods, would open a brick-and-mortar store in the previous JCPenney outpost. The store was to feature a cafe and a rooftop deck with a bar. The Wayfair store was planned to open in 2023 or 2024 before plans were cancelled.
In 2023, it was announced that Eataly, a chain of Italian food halls, would be opening at the mall in 2025. It opened on October 2, 2025.
In August 2020, Lord & Taylor announced it would close all its stores, as a result of the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. On June 18, 2024, it was announced that Netflix would open a Netflix House venue in the former Lord & Taylor space, featuring set replicas from shows and movies, themed restaurants, a theater, and gift shops. The venue is the first-of-its-kind, alongside another set to open at Galleria Dallas in Dallas. Netflix House opened on November 12, 2025.
In March 2025, it was announced that Simon was nearing a deal to bring retail and entertainment venues to the former JCPenney building. On October 23, 2025, Simon announced that Level99, an entertainment venue, would open in 2027 using a portion of the former JCPenney. On November 3, 2025, it was announced that Dick's House of Sport, an experiential retail concept by Dick's Sporting Goods, would open in 2027 using an additional portion of the former JCPenney.
Anchor stores
Current anchors

Plaza
- Neiman Marcus (opened 1995)
- Nordstrom (opened 1995)
- Dick's Sporting Goods (opened 2014)
- Dick's House of Sport (proposed; to open in 2027)
- Primark (opened 2015)
- Netflix House (opened 2025)
- Level99 (proposed; to open in 2027)
Court
- Bloomingdale's (opened 1981)
- Macy's (opened 1986)
Former anchors
Plaza
- Acme Markets
- Woolworth
- E. J. Korvette (1962–1980)
- JCPenney (first building, 1963–1992; second building, 1992–2017)
- Wanamaker's (1965–1995)
- Gimbels (1966–1986)
- Sears (1983–2015)
- Stern's (1986–1992)
- Hecht's (1995–1996)
- Lord & Taylor (1995–2021)
- Strawbridge’s (1996–2006)
- Macy's (2006–2007)
Court
- Bamberger's (1981–1986)
- Abraham & Straus (1981–1987)
- Strawbridge's (1988–1999)
References
References
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- (August 5, 2019). "The Biggest Shopping Mall in America".
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- "2010 CENSUS – CENSUS BLOCK MAP: King of Prussia CDP, PA". [[U.S. Census Bureau]].
- (2016). "Montgomery County, Pennsylvania Highway Map". [[Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.
- "overview of King of Prussia Mall".
- "SEPTA Official Transit & Street Map Suburban". SEPTA.
- "Upper Merion Rambler brochure". Greater Valley Forge Transportation Management Association.
- "Overlook at King of Prussia". CBRE, Inc..
- "About". King of Prussia Town Center.
- "Home". The Village at Valley Forge.
- "About Us". King of Prussia Mall.
- "King of Prussia Mall Fact Sheet". [[Simon Property Group]].
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- "2000s – The King of Prussia Mall".
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- Van Allen, Peter. "What's new at the King of Prussia Mall?".
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- Puleo, Gary. (December 25, 2016). "Top stories of 2016: Expansion of King of Prussia Mall completed". The Times Herald.
- Panaritis, Maria. (January 17, 2014). "Sears to sublease some King of Prussia space to Dick's Sporting Goods". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- DiStefano, Joseph M.. (November 18, 2014). "PhillyDeals: Expansion planned at King of Prussia Plaza and Court". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- Kostelini, Natalie. (November 25, 2015). "Ahead of Black Friday, Primark opens store at King of Prussia Mall". Philadelphia Business Journal.
- "At King of Prussia | Seritage".
- (March 17, 2017). "J.C. Penney closing local stores; includes King of Prussia". WPVI-TV.
- Parmley, Suzette. (July 28, 2017). "The end is here for 3 Philly-area Penneys on Monday". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- Heinze, Justin. (March 28, 2018). "King of Prussia Mall To Undergo Multimillion Dollar Renovation".
- White, Abbey. (July 30, 2019). "Happy Place, a 15,000-square-foot, Instagram-ready pop-up, is coming to the King of Prussia Mall". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- (December 27, 2019). "Happy Place extending stay at King of Prussia Mall". WPVI-TV.
- Cooper, Kenny. (April 28, 2021). "Pa. coronavirus update: Montco cases on the decline, vaccine clinic locations shuffle". WHYY.
- Zucker, Noah. (June 7, 2022). "Wayfair to open brick-and-mortar store at King of Prussia Mall with cafe, rooftop bar". PhillyVoice.
- (11 August 2023). "Italian food hall Eataly to open King of Prussia location in 2025".
- Tanenbaum, Michael. (September 18, 2025). "Italian marketplace Eataly to open at King of Prussia Mall on Oct. 2".
- Bomey, Nathan. (August 27, 2020). "Lord & Taylor going out of business: Store closings, liquidation sales begin". [[USA Today]].
- Althouse, Michaela. (June 18, 2024). "Netflix House plans to open at the King of Prussia Mall in fall 2025". PhillyVoice.
- "The First Netflix Houses Will Open in Philadelphia and Dallas in Late 2025". Netflix Tudum.
- Kidd, Michael-Paul. (2025-03-20). "King of Prussia Mall Nears Deal to Transform Vacant JCPenney into New Experiences".
- (2025-11-03). "Dick's House of Sport planned for King of Prussia Mall".
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