Related
- Trolley Square Shooting
- Mar 29:
- Arrests likely in Trolley Square massacre gun probe
- Mar 15:
- Six weeks before tragedy, Talovic showed guns, ammo to his relatives
- Mar 14:
- Trolley Shooting: Even to the girl he loved, Talovic a mystery to the end
- Mar 10:
- Talovic handgun probe continues
- Mar 9:
- Shooting of Talovic recounted
- Mar 4:
- Hundreds join in mourning as Talovics bury their only son
- Feb 27:
- Body of Trolley Square shooter heading to Bosnia
- Feb 21:
- Trolley Square gun traced
- Feb 20:
- Families deal with guilt, scorn
- Feb 18:
- Talovic's shotgun acquired legally
- Feb 17:
- Talovic's body to go back to Bosnia
- Police lay out timeline of shooting
- Feb 15:
- Card shop was epicenter of shooting spree
- Trolley Square: A search for answers
- Feb 14:
- Trolley Square: Victims' lives brutally ended
- Trolley Square: Gun-rights debate gets drawn into aftermath
- Trolley Square: A timeline and map of events
- Trolley Square: A neighborhood left in shock
- Feb 13:
- Emotionless killer gunned down victims randomly
- Their stories: Bystanders shocked by killings
The area served as territorial and state fairgrounds until 1908 when Union Pacific Railroad magnate E.H. Harriman made it the site for an innovative trolley car system. At one time, more than 144 trolleys operated from mission-style car barns erected at the site. They served the area until the line was discontinued in 1945.
For years, Trolley persisted as a decaying garage for Utah Transit Authority buses and Utah Power maintenance vehicles and the historic block was littered with junk vehicles, old tires and trash contained within barbed wire. Then, in 1972, developers dedicated to historic restoration renovated the old barns, which were painted yellow at the time, into a collection of boutiques and trendy restaurants.
Retailers such as Pottery Barn, Restoration Hardware and Williams Sonoma are among key tenants In recent years, Trolley Square has struggled with retail vacancies and in August, ScanlanKemperBard, a Portland, Ore.- based real estate company, acquired it. Scanlan plans a major renovation of the 239,000-square-foot mall that will include the addition of a Whole Foods store and an underground parking terrace. NAI Utah Commercial Real Estate manages the property locally for SKB.
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