Previously, The Streets of Woodfield was an enclosed, discount-oriented shopping mall known as
One Schaumburg Place. One Schaumburg Place opened in 1991 under the development of Ken Tucker, anchored by a
Loews Cineplex,
Montgomery Ward,
Office Depot,
Filene's Basement,
Phar-Mor,
Child World, and
Highland Superstore, which later became Chernin Shoes. The mall was largely vacant throughout most of its history, particularly after Montgomery Ward closed in 1997. McCaffery Interests purchased One Schaumburg Place in 1997 and began reconfiguring the development from a two-level indoor mall into a streetside retail development. This major overhaul concluded in 2000. Original plans called for
The Home Depot's Expo Design Center to take over as the south anchor. In 2006, The Home Depot decided to close all of their Expo Design Centers by 2007. In 1997,
Maggiano's Little Italy and
Corner Bakery Cafe opened in the surrounding area. On October 9, 1998,
Galyan's opened as the first location the Chicago area. The store was renamed
Dick's Sporting Goods in 2004.
Carson's officially opened to the public in 2000. The shopping mall sold to
Blackstone Group in February 2015. On February 1, 2018,
The Bon-Ton, announced it would close 42 locations as part of their
Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, including the Carson's at the Streets of Woodfield. The store permanently closed in April 2018. This was the second anchor vacancy the lifestyle center has ever faced (As the Streets of Woodfield). Just a year later, a
Restoration Hardware Outlet store opened in the former Carson's space. In December 2021, it was announced that
GameWorks would cease operations after struggling financially due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. On February 26, 2024,
Dave & Busters opened inside the former
GameWorks space. ==Tenants==