Originally developed by developer
A. Alfred Taubman, Briarwood opened on October 3, 1973. At the time, it was anchored by
JCPenney and
Sears, with
Hudson's opening a year later.
Lord & Taylor was later added as the mall's fourth anchor in 1980. The store closed in 1993 and became
Jacobson's, which relocated from its flagship store in downtown Ann Arbor. Taubman's shopping center interests became a publicly traded
real estate investment trust,
Taubman Centers, in 1992. In 1998 Taubman Centers simplified its corporate structure and turned over full ownership to its financial partner, the GM Pension Trust. In 2001, Hudson's converted to
Marshall Field's, which converted to
Macy's five years later. Jacobson's would close in 2002 after the chain declared bankruptcy. Its location became the first
Von Maur store in the state of Michigan in September 2003. The mall received a major renovation the following year. Taubman continued to manage the mall until 2004, when
The Mills Corporation became 50 percent owner and manager. In 2007,
Simon Property Group gained control of the Mills. It is Simon's first managed property in the state of Michigan. Briarwood Mall was home to a
movie theater at its grand opening, originally run as "
United Artists Briarwood." After the closure of many of United Artists' theaters in the late 1990s, the theater was operated as "Madstone Theater of Ann Arbor", "Village 7 Theaters", and "Movies at Briarwood." The theater was later reduced to four screens, as the other three screens were taken over by a new
Pottery Barn. The theaters closed again in 2010, with an
MC Sports replacing them. Briarwood received a major renovation in 2013 with new flooring, new lighting and redesigned mall entrances. Renovations also included LED lighting, and improved mall seating and bathrooms. In August 2014,
Forever 21 opened a newer, larger store in the JCPenney wing, replacing space that was formerly occupied by
Payless ShoeSource,
Zales Jewelers,
GameStop, Icing by
Claire's, a salon, and a vacant
Arby's. In 2015,
Sears Holdings spun off 235 of its properties, including the Sears at Briarwood Mall, into Seritage Growth Properties. MC Sports closed in 2017 and the space was split up between Colby Bounce and Signature Nails & Spa. However, Colby Bounce closed in 2018, and the space is currently Extreme Fun. On October 15, 2018, Sears announced that its Briarwood location would close after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In February 2023, Briarwood Mall announced the redevelopment plans of the former Sears space, intending to replace it with a two-level retail building, a gourmet grocery store, an approximately four-level, multi-family residential building, and an out lot building. These plans were revised in April 2024, splitting the initial planned retail building into two smaller buildings and adding a 325-stall parking structure and outdoor plaza adjacent to the residential building. In July 2023, a Texas de Brazil, the chain's second location in Michigan, opened in the former Bravo! Cucina Italiana space. The supermarket that opened on the site of the former Sears was eventually constructed and named Harvest Market. Harvest Market eventually opened on April 15, 2026. The luxury apartments built next to Harvest Market and the rest of the mall located in the former Sears parking lot, is projected to be completed in August 15, 2026.
Dick’s Sporting Goods has also announced plans to open a store on a portion of the former Sears site. ==See also==