The Boulevard Mall

The Boulevard Mall
The Boulevard Mall in 2019
LocationParadise, Nevada
Address3528 South Maryland Parkway
Las Vegas, Nevada
Opening dateMarch 6, 1968 (1968-03-06)
DeveloperHaas and Haynie Investment Corporation
OwnerBoulevard Ventures LLC
2495 Riviera LP
ArchitectRobert R. Weber and Associates
Stores and services124 (as of 1997)
~80 (as of 2024)
Anchor tenants4
Floor area1,180,000 sq ft (110,000 m2)
Floors1
Parking~6,000
Websiteboulevardmall.com

The Boulevard Mall is a single-story super-regional shopping mall in Paradise, Nevada, United States. Located on 75 acres (30 ha), the mall has 1,180,000 sq ft (110,000 m2) of leasable retail space, with approximately 80 tenants as of 2024. Anchor tenants include Goodwill, John's Incredible Pizza Company, Marshalls, and One World Interactive Aquarium (formerly part of the SeaQuest chain). The mall also includes the El Mercado marketplace and a Galaxy Theatres movie theater. It is the oldest shopping mall in the Las Vegas Valley.

Initially announced as the Parkway Mall in September 1963, it opened as The Boulevard Mall on March 6, 1968. It contained 26 stores and four department stores upon opening. It became one of the top shopping spots in the Las Vegas Valley, and was popular among tourists because of its close proximity to the Las Vegas Strip. Customer attendance decreased after the opening of the nearby Fashion Show Mall in 1981. The Boulevard Mall was renovated in 1984. An expansion and further renovations began in 1990 and were completed in 1992, at a cost of $60 million. It was the largest mall in Las Vegas until 2002.

Beginning in 2008, the mall was affected by a decrease in customer attendance due to the Great Recession. By early 2012, it experienced increased customer visitations after introducing several Hispanic community organizations as tenants, in response to the growing nearby Hispanic community. Sansone Companies purchased the mall in November 2013, at a cost of $54.5 million, and then launched a $25 million overhaul which included several unique tenants not usually associated with malls. Macy's and JCPenney closed in 2017, followed by Sears in 2019. Several new tenants have since occupied the vacant anchor spaces, for uses such as call centers and schools.