Barnes & Noble is opening 58 stores in 2024: Here’s a full list of cities that will get new locations

Barnes & Noble is opening 58 stores in 2024: Here’s a full list of cities that will get new locations

The national bookseller is continuing its comeback this year, with the most openings in a single year since at least 2009.

BY Christopher Zara

In a news environment filled with gloomy stories about the decline of brick-and-mortar retail, we’ll take the wins where we can get them.

Barnes & Noble is continuing its hot streak this year, having already opened an impressive 32 stores across more than 20 states since January, the bookseller told Fast Company on Friday. For context, that’s more than the 30 stores it had planned to open in all of 2023.

In total, the company said it was on track to open 58 new locations before 2025—more stores than it’s opened in a single year since at least 2009.

Back then, Barnes & Noble was facing what looked like existential threats from Amazon and the broader shift to online commerce, not to mention a decline in print media that had many industry insiders questioning the future viability of books. Amazon’s first Kindle was released in 2007 while Barnes & Noble followed up with its Nook e-reader two years later. At one point, it was dedicating a good chunk of precious shelf space to the sterile-looking devices.

But physical books and bookstores have both proven surprisingly durable in the era of social media, aided by passionate online communities, Facebook-driven book clubs, and TikTok’s ever-popular #booktok hashtag. Independent stores are also experiencing a resurgence, with the American Booksellers Association telling the Associated Press that its 2023 membership has nearly doubled from 2016.

Barnes & Noble’s ongoing growth is especially notable in a year when legacy retail brands from Big Lots to Rite Aid are closing significant numbers of locations and shrinking their physical footprints. Some companies, such as the Sam Ash chain of music stores, are folding altogether.

As we reported last year, Barnes & Noble’s brand transformation—from ’90s-era corporate superstore to friendly neighborhood bookseller fighting the good fight against Amazon’s algorithmic dominance—has been a big part of its recent success. Its newer stores tend to be smaller and better designed than the massive and unwieldy spaces it was known for 15 years ago. Having a nice pile of new releases at the ready for TikTok influencers probably doesn’t hurt.

Below is a full list of cities where Barnes & Noble has opened or plans to open new locations this year.

Stores opened in 2024 so far

January

  • Estero, FL
  • Ledgewood, NJ
  • Redding, CA
  • Visalia, CA
  • Kalispell, MT

February

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  • Jonesboro, AR
  • Panama City Beach, FL
  • American Fork, UT 

March

  • Columbia, SC
  • Victor, NY
  • Gainesville, FL
  • Meriden, CT

April

  • Concord Mills, NC
  • New Orleans, LA

May

  • Dubuque, IA
  • Dawsonville, GA
  • Mooresville, NC
  • South Portland, ME
  • Sandy Commons, Southtown, UT
  • Clark & Diversey, IL

June

  • Oswego, IL
  • Lehigh Valley, PA
  • Selma, TX
  • Northbrook, IL
  • Rochester Hills, MI

July

  • Wesleyan Plaza, TX
  • Flowood, MS
  • Conroe, TX
  • Lake Orion, MI
  • Denham Springs, LA

August

  • Santa Fe, NM
  • Fayette, KY

Stores on track to open before 2025 

  • Destiny, NY
  • Santa Monica, CA
  • Doylestown, PA
  • Las Vegas, NV
  • Cool Springs Galleria, TN
  • Rehoboth Beach, DE
  • Alamo Ranch, TX
  • Sawgrass, FL
  • Allen, TX
  • Huntington, NY
  • Walden Galleria, NY
  • Tucson, AZ
  • St Louis Galleria, MO
  • Murray, UT
  • Wicker Park, IL
  • Georgetown, DC
  • Schereville, IN
  • Wichita, KS
  • Manassas, VA
  • Waterford Lakes, FL
  • Brentwood, CA
  • Park City, UT
  • Seabrook, NH
  • Mt Kisco, NY
  • Monmouth Sq, NJ
  • Issaquah, WA
 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Christopher Zara is a senior editor for Fast Company, where he runs the news desk and oversees daily coverage of everything from Big Tech to small startups, company culture, innovation, design, retail, travel, finance, and any topic in the Fast Company universe. He has years of experience as an editor and a reporter who writes about business, technology, media, culture, theater, and sometimes the intersecting worlds of all five 


 

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