Gene Leahy Mall

Summary

Gene Leahy Mall, also known locally as Central Park or The Mall, is a 9.6-acre (39,000 m2) park located at 1302 Farnam on the Mall in Downtown Omaha, Nebraska, U.S., and bordered by South 10th Street. There are also two huge slides, a sculpture garden, a remote-control boat cove, a large children's play area, and an amphitheater where outdoor concerts are held in the summer. The mall is decorated with thousands of lights during the winter holiday season.[1][2] Connected on its eastern edge with the Heartland of America Park, it is also borders the former site of the W. Dale Clark Library (demolished in fall 2022), the former Burlington Headquarters Building, the Old Market and the ConAgra campus.

Gene Leahy Mall
View of holiday lights looking west along the lagoon at the Gene Leahy Mall, after to the 2023 redevelopment
Map
TypeMunicipal (Omaha)
LocationDowntown Omaha
Coordinates41°15′29″N 95°55′52″W / 41.25806°N 95.93111°W / 41.25806; -95.93111
Area9.6 acres (39,000 m2)
OpenAll year

About edit

Originally conceived in the 1970s, the Gene Leahy Mall was named after Omaha Mayor Eugene A. Leahy, and is regarded as being a major impetus for the redevelopment of downtown into a thriving commercial, residential and cultural center in Omaha.[3] In 2005 a major redevelopment process began focused on redesigning The Mall and several areas surrounding the Old Market.[4]

In July 2022, the redevelopment of The Mall was completed featuring a new concert venue pavilion, open lawn area, and redesigned waterfront walkway while retaining the iconic metal slides.[5]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Gene Leahy Pedestrian Mall | Omaha Attractions - Things to Do", Omaha Convention and Visitors Bureau. Retrieved 6/30/2014.
  2. ^ Gene Leahy Mall. University of Nebraska at Lincoln. Retrieved 8/22/07.
  3. ^ "New Vision for 11th Street", Omaha By Design. Retrieved 8/22/07.
  4. ^ "11th Street Update", Omaha By Design. Retrieved 8/22/07.
  5. ^ “Grand Reopening Of Omaha’s Gene Leahy Mall Caps Half-Century Of History", Omaha Daily Record. Retrieved 07/04/22.