About Me

My photo
I have more than 40 years in the news business and have successfully evolved into an electronic journalist. Comings & Goings and Southland Savvy track news about businesses in Chicago's Southland.

T.J. Maxx opens today in Tinley Park


T.J. Maxx opens today in Tinley Park's Brookside Marketplace.
By Bob Bong
Southland Savvy

Discount retailer T.J. Maxx will open its new Tinley Park store at 8 a.m. today at Brookside Marketplace at 191st Street and Harlem Avenue.

The 23,000-square-foot store replaces a slightly larger location at 16025 S. Harlem in the Tinley Park Plaza. That store closed Sunday. Its employees were offered transfers to the new store.

As first reported in May, the store will occupy space that formerly housed the Lane Bryant women's clothing store where five women were murdered in February 2008. The killer has not been caught.

T.J. Maxx will make a $10,000 donation to the Tinley Park-based Together We Cope charity in honor of the Lane Bryant victims: Connie R. Woolfolk, of Flossmoor; Sarah T. Szafranski, of Oak Forest; Carrie Hudek Chiuso, of Frankfort, Rhoda McFarland, of Joliet, and Jennifer L. Bishop, of South Bend, Ind.

Kathryn Straniero, executive director of Together We Cope, said the agency was  honored to receive this donation.

“We will use these funds to continue the work we do at this time of the year, which is helping to keep people in their homes during the winter, helping to pay heating bills for residents having financial crises, and putting children in need into warm winter coats. We are honored to do so in memory of the five women who lost their lives in this tragedy.”

Together We Cope is a Tinley Park based nonprofit that serves families in crisis from 22 south suburban communities.

The T.J. Maxx opening is the second of a national chain in that part of Brookside Marketplace, which had lagged behind the rest of the development. A Ross Dress for Less discount store opened last month just to the north and a Kay Jewelers store is set to open in another new building that was recently finished on the site, which is owned by Ohio-based DDR Corp.

Grand opening store hours today will be 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Regular hours will be from 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.

TJX Cos., which owns T.J. Maxx, also operates a HomeGoods store at Brookside Marketplace.

Pure Barre fitness studio opens in Orland Park

Pure Barre, a fitness center for women that uses ballet moves to help women get in shape, opened Tuesday at 14934 S. LaGrange Road in Orland Park's Park Pointe Plaza.

"We use small weights as well as the ballet bar to facilitate our workouts," said studio manager Mary Bertke, who is also one of six fitness instructors at the studio. "But dance experience is not necessary."

Bertke said the aim of Pure Barre is to "lengthen and strengthen muscle tone" through isometric movements favored by ballet dancers.

The Orland location is the first in the Chicago suburbs for the chain, which began franchising in 2009 and has grown to more than 150 locations.

Bertke said classes are offered from 5:30 a.m. to 7:15 p.m.

For information, call 708-460-4015, visit Pure Barre or check out their Facebook page.

Used car lots coming to Bridgeview

Two new used car lots will be opening soon in Bridgeview.

One will take over a former Citgo gas station and detail shop at 9150 S. Harlem Ave. while the other will take over the former Super Buy Motors car lot at 7158 S. Harlem Ave.

“We’re always glad to see businesses choose Bridgeview as their destination,” said Bridgeview Trustee Claudette Struzik. “It’s an encouraging trend, and we’ll continue to work to draw interest from businesses that will invest in our community and its people.”

Struzik said the businesses were planning on investing nearly $1 million in each location.

Both lots have already been approved by the Bridgeview Village Board.
 
If you see a new business in town or wonder what happened to an old favorite, drop me a line at bobbong@hotmail.com.

You can also follow business happenings at Comings & Goings.

Art Van Furniture opens Saturday in Bedford Park shopping center

Workmen put the finishing touches on the Art Van Furniture store in Bedford Park.
By Bob Bong
Southland Savvy

Michigan-based Art Van Furniture, a chain known for its furniture and mattresses, is scheduled to open a new store with a ribbon cutting at 9 a.m. Saturday in the Bedford City Square plaza in Bedford Park at 7200 S. Cicero Ave.

 Immediately following the ribbon cutting ceremony, Art Van Furniture will celebrate the grand opening with free fall festival activities such as face painting, clown performances, pumpkin painting, a scarecrow magician and a balloon artist. The celebration will continue on Sunday, Oct. 27 with face painting, clowns and DJ entertainment.

The company moved into the Chicago market in July when it opened its first store in Orland Park and a distribution center in Bolingbrook.

The store will be corporate-owned and employ 60 to 80 workers.

The Bedford Park store will be the chain's fifth store in the Chicago market. Other stores are in Orland Park, Chicago, Bolingbrook, Batavia and Merrillville-Hobart in northwest Indiana.

Hours will be from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday.

Bed Bath & Beyond closing in Cal City

The Bed Bath & Beyond store in the River Oaks West shopping center is in the final weeks of a liquidation sale that will see the store close sometime in November.

A manager at the store said the location had been winding down for about a month and would be closed within the next "two to three weeks."

The company sent out an email this week notifying customers that the store was closing.

Yogo Crave now open in Worth

A frozen yogurt store called Yogo Crave opened a few weeks ago at 11228 S. Harlem Ave. in Worth. The shop also sells ice cream, milkshakes, smoothies, iced coffees and cappuccinos.

Hours for the shop are 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday.

For information, call 708-827-5883 or visit their Facebookpage.

If you see a new business in town or wonder what happened to an old favorite, drop me a line at bobbong@hotmail.com.

Mayan Palace replaces La Mex in Orland

Mayan Palace opened recently in the former La Mex location on 159th Street in Orland Park.
By Bob Bong
Southland Savvy

La Mex restaurant in Orland Park’s Seville Plaza recently changed ownership and its name to Mayan Palace.

New owner Rudy Delarosa also owns the original Mayan Palace at 2703 S. Halsted St. in Chicago.

Delarosa purchased the 8600 W. 159th St. location a few months ago from his nephew, who still owns La Mex locations in Morris and Joliet.

A manager at the Orland location said Delarosa has been involved at the restaurant for about a year but recently acquired the location and made the name change about three weeks ago after making some minor adjustments to the menu.

A manager at the Halsted Street location said the new restaurant features most of the same menu items but they are prepared differently.

“There is new management, a new kitchen and better food,” the manager said.

Hours under Mayan Palace will be 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday to Thursday, 11 a.m. to midnight on Friday and Saturday and 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Sunday.

For information, call 708-349-8339.

Riley’s Trick Shop has new home

Riley’s Trick Shop, which sold costumes, gag gifts and magic tricks for 40 years at 6442 W. 111th St. in Worth opened in its new, smaller home in Palos Hills earlier this month.

The new location at 8086 W. 111th St. is in a strip center near Stagg High School and Sacred Heart Church and has been renamed Riley’s Tricks & Gifts. It opened on Oct. 5.

The store, which was founded in 1937 by current owner Jim Riley’s father, has moved twice since it was founded.  

There was also a second store in Frankfort from 2007 to 2010 that was operated by Riley’s daughter.

The family-owned store is getting out of the costume business and is offering some for as low as $10 and some are buy one, get one free, according to its Facebook page.

Hours at the new location are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.

For information, call 800-474-5397 or visit their website at Riley's Trick Shop. 

Title Max opens second Orland location

Title Max, one of those companies that provides loans to people who use their car title as collateral, has opened a second Orland Park location at 9400 W. 159th St., next door to the new Pop’s Italian Beef restaurant.

For information, call 708-403-2855.

Sleepy’s opens in Orland Park

Sleepy's, a New York-based company that calls itself the world's largest mattress retailer and which is in the midst of a major expansion into the Chicago marketplace in general and the south suburban marketplace in particular, has opened a new store at 15840 S. Harlem Ave. in Orland Park.

The Hicksville-based company, which has more than 800 showrooms in 14 Eastern and mid-Atlantic states and carries a wide selection of mattress brands, opened its first Chicago-area store at the end of June in Evergreen Park and has since opened additional stores at 11043 W. Lincoln Highway in Frankfort's Prairie Crossing shopping center, and at Ford City shopping center at 71st Street and Cicero Avenue in Chicago.

The chain also is preparing to open a store in The Landing shopping center at 16821 S. Torrence Ave. in Lansing.

The company, which got its start in 1931 in Brooklyn, did not respond to numerous calls and emails asking about its plans.

If you see a new business in town or wonder what happened to an old favorite, drop me a line at bobbong@hotmail.com.

You can also follow business happenings at Comings & Goings.