Providence Place Mall has Endured Loss of Major Tenants: Is Macy’s Next?

Share
Providence Place Mall has Endured Loss of Major Tenants: Is Macy’s Next?
Copy

Over the past decade, the Providence Place Mall has lost major stores like JCPenney, Nordstrom and Gap. Macy’s, the largest department store chain in the United States, announced in late February that it will close 150 stores over the next two years.

While Macy’s has yet to announce what locations will be closed nationwide, certainly there is concern at Providence’s primary retail destination about the mall’s anchor store.

Macy’s called the 150 stores it plans to shutter “underproductive” and plans to begin closing retail outlets, including 50 by the end of 2024.

The Public Radio’s Luis Hernandez spoke to Providence Business News reporter Katie Castellani about the future of Macy’s in Providence. The full interview can be found here.

At Alfred Lima Elementary School, a student-run news crew is flipping the narrative on Providence’s public schools — interviewing state leaders, reporting in two languages, and sharing their stories with the world
Mayor Brett Smiley discusses how his administration is tackling the city’s biggest issues — from the housing shortage and SNAP crisis to community trust in police — as he looks ahead to a 2026 re-election bid
USDA says it will not send out food stamp money in November due to the federal shutdown. Now, Rhode Islanders are grappling with how to make ends meet
Federal cuts to Medicaid could leave up to 50,000 Rhode Islanders without health insurance, straining the state’s already limited primary care system and putting communities like Central Falls - where half the population relies on Medicaid - at particular risk, according to Dr. Michael Fine
Gov. Dan McKee says the state will shift $6 million from other federal programs to help feed Rhode Islanders as SNAP benefits run out — while Attorney General Peter Neronha joins a multistate lawsuit against the Trump administration to restore funding