James Avery Artisan Jewelry, West Western Wear, 5.11 Tactical, and Whataburger operating simultaneously within a single regional mall in Tyler, Texas, produce a tenant roster that signals the East Texas cultural and commercial identity more precisely than any combination of national chain retailers alone could achieve: James Avery as the Kerrville, Texas-founded fine jewelry brand whose sterling silver and natural motif designs have served the Texas professional women’s market for more than seven decades; West Western Wear as the western and ranch lifestyle retailer that the East Texas agricultural heritage sustains; 5.11 Tactical as the professional-grade apparel brand whose East Texas market penetration follows the regional concentration of law enforcement, military veterans, and first responders that the pine belt corridor between Dallas and the Louisiana border produces; and Whataburger as the San Antonio-founded burger chain that the Texas consumer treats as a cultural institution rather than a fast food option.
Dillard’s and JCPenney anchor the department store tier for the Tyler market, which as the commercial hub of East Texas draws from a trade area extending across Smith, Van Zandt, Rusk, Cherokee, and Henderson counties whose rural and small-town residential base treats Broadway Square as the primary enclosed comparison-shopping destination for the regional consumer. Sephora and MAC Cosmetics serve the prestige beauty category. lululemon serves the premium activewear segment. Dick’s Sporting Goods anchors the sporting goods category. Coach serves the accessible luxury position. LongHorn Steakhouse anchors the full-service dining category. HomeGoods serves the home decor and furnishings category.
The fashion floor covers American Eagle, Aeropostale, Hollister, Express, Buckle, and Victoria’s Secret. Champs Sports, Foot Locker, and Zumiez cover the athletic footwear register. The property’s commercial case is the East Texas regional hub: Broadway Square serves a trade area whose rural population density and distance from the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston retail cores gives the Tyler property a captive catchment that no competing enclosed mall within a 60-mile radius of downtown Tyler replicates.
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