The Huntington Mall opened on Tuesday 3 February 1981, about 12 miles (19 km) east of downtown Huntington near exit 20 of Interstate 64.[2]
At the time, it included JCPenney, Lazarus, Stone & Thomas, and Sears as its anchor stores. When the mall's Foot Locker store opened, tennis player Bobby Riggs made an appearance at the mall, challenging mall employees to a game of tennis.[3]Phar-Mor, a discount pharmacy chain, was later added to the mall as its fifth anchor in 1990.[4]
In mid-2008, it was announced that Cinemark would open a new movie theater at the mall, replacing the vacated six-screen complex that closed in 2006 and an adjacent cafeteria (which use to be Morrison's Cafeteria). This new theater opened in early 2009.[6]
Borders Books closed in 2011, due to the company's bankruptcy. Books-A-Million later replaced it. Parent company The Bon-Ton closed the Elder-Beerman in the mall on January 31, 2016,[7] and the space was split among Forever 21, TJ Maxx, and HomeGoods.
On August 6, 2019, Sears announced it would be closing its location at the mall in late October, while the auto center closed in late August.[8] Later that year on October 2, 2019, Forever 21 announced that it would also be closing in late 2019 after filing for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy.[9]
On November 3, 2023 Dave & Buster's announced that it will be opening a location within the mall at the prior Forever 21 location.[10]
Woody Williams Center for Advanced Learning and Careers is currently under construction and is taking up both floors of the former Sears. The building is expected to house a trade school which will open in 2026.
Impact
Huntington Mall is the largest mall in the state of West Virginia.[11] When the mall was built, the only other businesses around it were two bars and an Exxon gas station. Since the mall's opening, several retailers have been built around the mall, including four motels and several restaurants, as well as a Walmart Supercenter, the first Best Buy in West Virginia, and the first Sheetz gas station/convenience store in southern West Virginia.[2] Huntington Mall has also averaged $375 million in retail trade, significantly increasing the tax revenue for Barboursville's budgets.[2]