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Northway Mall, Now ‘North Pointe,’ Seeking a Redeveloper

Feb 16, 2023 | News, Real Estate, Retail

northway mall

Northway Mall still has a few tenants, and the owner is trying to attract more.

CBRE

The Northway Mall near Anchorage’s Mountain View neighborhood is not entirely vacant, but it is a shadow of its former self. Now the owner is retaining a real estate firm to seek a redeveloper to bring the shopping center back to life.

Turning Point for North Pointe

Opened in 1980 with Safeway, Pay ‘n Save, and Lamonts as anchors, the indoor corridor dwindled over forty years. Carrs-Safeway announced in 2020 that it would close that location, and the COVID-19 pandemic dealt a staggering blow that September: Chicago-based property management firm Jones Lang LaSalle sent eviction notices to all tenants without exterior entrances. Four businesses with their own doors remained on the property, but one of those, Burlington Coat Factory, moved up the highway to Tikahtnu Commons. That leaves just Planet Fitness, Shockwave Trampoline Park, and Xpress Lube.

The building has changed ownership from Georgia-based Colony Bank to a developer in Florida that is now listing the building for sale as a redevelopment opportunity. The owner has retained Texas-based CBRE, through its National Retail Partners in Seattle, to market the site, which has been rebranded as North Pointe.

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Alaska Business Magazine March 2026 cover

March 2026

According to CBRE’s Dino Christophilis, buyers have already shown interest, with some proposing complete redevelopment, re-leasing portions of the existing mall, or converting the mall to other uses, like self-storage or office.

“While the highest and best use is undefined, the former mall is ideal for conversion or redevelopment to an alternative use,” says Christophilis. “Few properties in Anchorage offer similar flexibility, size, and convenient exposure and access to Glenn Highway.”

At the time of the evictions, mall manager Mao Tosi noted that redevelopment could also eliminate the common interior, becoming a strip mall like The Shoppes at Glenn Square across the highway. Such a major conversion would reduce the costs for heat, electricity, and security.

The 30.12-acre site consists of 195,280 square feet of big-box retail space, 148,775 square feet of enclosed mall space, 10,327 square feet of pad buildings, and 1,225 parking spaces. It is available for full or partial redevelopment. Current zoning allows for a wide range of uses, including warehouse, manufacturing/distribution, self-storage, general retail, office, automotive lots, and hotel.

Alaska Business Magazine March 2026 cover
In This Issue
ARCTIC DEVELOPMENT
March 2026
While all of Alaska is “arctic” to the rest of the country, our focus in the March 2026 Arctic Development special section is on projects more closely aligned to the actual Arctic, including an update on the Port of Nome deep-draft project, offshore oil activity, plans for projects on Savoonga and on the North Slope, and our cover story about the transportation industry’s efforts to operate responsibly in waters worldwide, which has direct applications to Arctic Seas. Also in this issue: learn more about the Chin’an Gaming Hall, USACE projects, the new Wildbirch Hotel, and the transportation and logistics of Girl Scout cookies. Enjoy!
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