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Steeplegate Mall

1990 establishments in New HampshireBuildings and structures in Concord, New HampshireNamdar Realty GroupShopping malls established in 1990Shopping malls in New Hampshire
Tourist attractions in Concord, New Hampshire
Steeplegate Main Entrance
Steeplegate Main Entrance

Steeplegate Mall is an enclosed shopping mall in Concord, New Hampshire, United States. Opened in 1990, it has struggled with high vacancy rates throughout its existence. Its largest retailer is JCPenney, the only traditional store left alongside Talbots and Chico's. It also features a live theater that opened in 2016, a trampoline park that opened in 2018, a health club that opened in 2019, and a pickleball club that opened in 2022.The mall opened with four large retail anchor stores, a food court with a 630-square-foot (59 m2) mosaic, and room for about 62 storefronts, depending on layout. Following the interior's closure on April 22, 2022, after the mall's owners evicted the few remaining interior businesses, only six businesses with exterior entrances plus the later-opened pickleball club are open. As of 2023, new owners are proposing to tear most of it down and build a large mixed-use development with apartments and some retail.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Steeplegate Mall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Steeplegate Mall
Loudon Road, Concord

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.22258 ° E -71.4867 °
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Steeplegate Mall

Loudon Road 270
03301 Concord
New Hampshire, United States
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Steeplegate Main Entrance
Steeplegate Main Entrance
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New Hampshire Supreme Court
New Hampshire Supreme Court

The New Hampshire Supreme Court is the supreme court of the U.S. state of New Hampshire and sole appellate court of the state. The Supreme Court is seated in the state capital, Concord. The Court is composed of a Chief Justice and four Associate Justices appointed by the Governor and Executive Council to serve during "good behavior" until retirement or the age of seventy. The senior member of the Court is able to specially assign lower-court judges, as well as retired justices, to fill vacancies on the Court. The Supreme Court is the administrative authority over the state's judicial system. The Court has both mandatory and discretionary appellate jurisdiction. In 2000, the Court created a "Three Judges Expedited" or 3JX panel to issue decisions in cases of less precedential value, with its decision only binding on the present case. In 2004, the court began accepting all appeals from the trial courts for the first time in 25 years. From 1776 to 1876, the then four-member court was known as the "Superior Court of Judicature", until the name was changed by an act of the New Hampshire General Court. In 1901, the number of justices was increased from four to five. Two Supreme Court justices have been the only two state officials to be impeached in New Hampshire: Justice Woodbury Langdon resigned prior to his trial in 1790, and Chief Justice David Brock was acquitted by the New Hampshire Senate in 2000. Retired Associate Justice David Souter of the Supreme Court of the United States served on the New Hampshire Supreme Court from 1983 to 1990.