Showing posts with label Brendle's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brendle's. Show all posts

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Kinston Plaza: Kinston, NC

The year before Kinston gained its first enclosed mall, Kinston was already enjoying the fruits of what was then a thriving local economy gaining its first modern shopping center with the construction of Kinston Plaza.  While small by today's standards, the center is actually a combination of strip and covered arcade that is one of the largest and most vintage arcades I have run across that is still operational.  While very local in nature today, the center once had a larger draw.


Built in 1966, Kinston Plaza was anchored by Woolco, Colonial Stores and A&P.  The arcade portion may have not been original to the center, instead added around 1970 considering that the now-closed theater that anchors the back of the arcade was opened in 1970.  The theater, named Trans-Lux Inflight Cinema, was renamed Plaza Theater in 1974, twinned in the early 80's and operated at the center until it closed for good in 2000 when a seven screen theater nearby replaced the two screen cinema.  However, the center was already in decline long before the theaters closed.




Kinston Plaza's arcade is one of the best preserved mid-century specimens featuring a mix of regionally-popular faux Colonial and 60's modern design.  While covered, the center is completely open-air making the arcade function like a cave.  The far end of the mall is now a long-closed theater.  Photos taken June 15, 2015.


Theater entrance with skylight providing eerie natural light overhead.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.



Detail of skylights, which were clearly designed with a cloudy look and obviously need some debris cleaned off.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.





Detail of storefronts in the mall, now exclusively service-type tenants.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.

It is obvious to note that none of the original anchor tenants are still in business today, so quite a few changes occurred with the anchors.  The first of those was when Colonial Stores became Big Star in 1978.  Big Star, of course, later closed after stores in the market were sold to Harris Teeter in 1988.  Second was when Woolco went out of business in 1982.  At the time, the shopping center was doing well enough and it was quickly filled by Brendle's Catalog Showroom.  By 1992, both supermarkets had left after A&P exited the market as the company continued to decline.  Brendle's itself would end operations in 1996 joining every other catalog merchant in the dustbin of history.  With the theater already closed, the shopping center probably looked nearly abandoned before 2000, but smaller chains came into fill the void and it recovered.


Leaving the mall, it is like twilight before the dawn, but about 40 years ago.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.


While ownership may have changed, this barber shop/salon is likely the oldest continuously-operating tenant in the shopping center.  Many shopping center barber shops remain mostly unchanged from 50 years ago.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.


Hollow store at corner of mall and parking lot.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.


The exterior mall entrance has, unfortunately, been updated into this deceptively boring stucco facade hiding the vintage goodness within.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.


Piggly Wiggly today occupies what was originally a Woolco.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.


This sign for the shopping center along an adjacent street is likely (almost) original considering the arrow likely replaced an older arrow with flashing lights.  Photo taken June 15, 2015.

Today, the center is alive and (mostly) well again catering to wider tastes and demographics than the original shopping center.  Major tenants include Piggly Wiggly in the old Woolco space, Big Lots in the old Colonial/Big Star and It's Fashion Metro in the old Eckerds space.  A hair salon and dance studio still operate in the "mini mall" space (what the shopping center calls it!), and the former A&P is now a furniture store.  In a town with many vacant retail centers and a mall on its last legs, Kinston Plaza remains a bright spot in the city.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Rock Hill Galleria: Rock Hill, SC

Last year, I covered a mall known as Houston County Galleria.  The Houston Galleria is a struggling mall with otherwise solid anchor tenants that effectively trashed a nearby successful mall overnight while never actually truly succeeding in its own right.  The mall was also built by Zamias Enterprises with a rather lackluster track record of success in their 90's mall portfolio.  The story is similar with Rock Hill Galleria, but the situation is a little different. The anchor lineup, for one, has been a bit more volatile and Rock Hill Galleria, while troubled, is definitely more successful.  As a sister mall to the Houston County mall, however, it is interesting to note the similarities and differences, and it is also important to note the retail scene around it, which is quite different, as well as a better location (conveniently right off I-77).


Rock Hill Galleria arrived on the scene in 1991 featuring an eclectic anchor tenant line-up of Belk, JCPenney, Phar-Mor, Sears and Wal-Mart.  Of all the original anchors, only Phar-Mor is not in the mall anymore so on the surface it appears this would be a very successful mall much in the case of my previous example.  The problems are two-fold: management problems and a location that was placed too close to superior competition.  Also built by Zamias, the mall completely killed the city's older mall known as Rock Hill Mall by taking all of its anchors: Belk, Sears and JCPenney.  Labelscar covered this mall through a local contributor.  Unlike in the case in Houston County, GA, though, the older mall did not survive re-purposed like Houston Mall did...it died completely in 1992 and was abandoned in the late 90's.  By 2007, that mall was demolished for a lifestyle center-type development that has also struggled to attract tenants.

The lead-in and this photo show that an elaborate ceiling treatment can go a long way to create an attractive ambience in a mall.  I have nothing to complain about here except the lack of an indoor jungle below to compliment it.  Photos by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.
Miscellaneous details including pretty nice flooring.  By the 90's, malls had come a long way from the standard concrete flooring of the 60's.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Of course, some of the architecture is a bit dubious.  Apparently the architect was enjoying some peppermint Life Savers when he was somehow inspired to hang these ring-shaped light fixture thingies from the ceiling.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Life Saver row could use some planters, though...it still looks a little cold.  I'm sure they were saving that space for kiosks that never came.  Instead of the Dead Sea (lotion) how about the Indoor Sea (water feature)?  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

One thing I can say for Zamias-built malls: they are neither ugly nor overly cheap looking.  They are very tasteful, but just seemed to falter on management, location and even size.  Note that these are all one-level malls built too close to larger two-level malls.  In the former case, it was now-struggling Macon Mall and in the latter case it is Carolina Place Mall.  Nearly every mall Zamias built was plagued with problems before they were even opened, and apparently construction was also delayed on the previous Zamias mall I covered.  These malls also were very anchor-heavy right as department stores were in consolidation and the mall craze was winding down, so timing worked against them as well.  The fact they killed older, more established malls also did not help their public reputation, similar to what happened with Crown America (Hess's)-owned malls.

Of course, being so close to Charlotte, Belk is a standard feature.  That's Belk Belk, too.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

I wonder what will happen to this Sears if the chain goes belly up.  Sharing a mall with Wal-Mart, this location is bound to be struggling.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Looking down the JCPenney wing toward JCPenney.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

This JCPenney entrance is so 90's I feel like I'm 14 years old again in a flannel shirt and bowl cut with some STP song stuck in my head looking at it.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.
While the story of Rock Hill Mall is long passed, the story of Rock Hill Galleria continues on.  In all, it is a reasonably attractive mall, though somewhat less interesting architecturally than its Georgia cousin.  At one level, the mall also has a tough time competing with very popular Carolina Place Mall further north: a two level mall that continues to be one of Charlotte's premier shopping malls only 15 miles away.  The distance is far enough to keep the mall viable but close enough for frustrated shoppers to take the longer drive for better stores.  This might explain why the mall keeps Belk, Sears and JCPenney along with a few popular chain stores while still being riddled with vacancies.

Once upon a time, Wal-Mart actually opened into this mall.  Then they built a Supercenter and shut themselves off from the mall.  None of the other discount stores ever acted this way...in fact, they embraced the mall as an extension of their business!!  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Pharmor is phar gone here in this pic, though it did manage to revive as the ill-fated Steve & Barry's University Sportswear up to 2009.  Was Drug Emporium ever here?  They took over many of the Pharmor locations.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

I guess "Famous Labels" did not successfully hide that they were really "Knockoffs 'R' Us".  In all seriousness, this was obviously a weak attempt to fill the void left by Goody's, which also departed in 2009 after arriving in 1998.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.


This image shows a relatively healthy part of the mall with Rock Hill Mall's logo in the background.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Aside from the three major department stores, the other anchors have been more volatile.  Phar-Mor, for one, failed as a chain in 1992.  It was briefly filled by Brendle's Catalog Showroom in 1995-1996, but otherwise was empty until it was finally filled in 2003 by Steve & Barry's University Sportswear, but this chain itself proved to be a dead mall filler and shoppers apparently concurred as the chain folded in 2008.  Goody's came later, adding onto the mall in 1998 but also closing in 2009 with "Famous Labels" briefly taking the space before tanking as well.  Lastly, Wal-Mart amazingly did not leave the mall, actually upgrading their store at the mall into a Supercenter in 2000.  Nevertheless, Wal-Mart has consistently proven a poor mall anchor and the other anchors clearly did not benefit from the mall nor add anything to it.  Such junior anchors today would need to be filled by stores like Best Buy and Dick's Sporting Goods to actually compliment the mall. 

Sorry, the GPS won't help you here.  If you end up falling in the dumpster next to the loading dock on your way from Belk to Sears, it's not our problem.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011. 





Belk's look is more dazzling than the simple arches but a little weird.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Sears here looks about like all the others built in that time period.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

I kinda dig this JCPenney entrance here...it reminds me a bit of a throne.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.


Rock Hill Galleria is the typical example of a 90's mall born with bad karma.  The mall was clearly built with the intent on "upgrading" the shopping experience.  "Upgrading" basically meant that they fully intended to kill that dated, smaller, darker mall on the other side of town, thus destroying viable real-estate that was realistically more right-sized for the market.  However, Rock Hill Mall was facing death anyway: the mall would have had significant trouble competing with Carolina Place, but the double trouble that came from two brand new malls was far more than the 1960's timepiece could endure. Rock Hill Galleria has endured more due to the growth in the area, but it still continues to struggle.  Rock Hill Galleria also saw some change in ownership since it was built.  Zamias finally gave up the mall in 2004, selling it to General Growth Properties.  However, General Growth apparently did not see the mall as enough of an asset to keep, selling it again to Cypress Equities a few months later.  Cypress still owns the mall, but has Jones Lang LaSalle manage the mall.

From this end, I am not impressed.  I am assuming this is close to the Wal-Mart non-mall entrance.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

This I really do like.  I am guessing this opens to the wing with the tragic food court that is so pathetic even Subway snubbed it.  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Nothing more at Pharmor.  If Steve & Barry couldn't pull it off, would Dick be interested?  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

Missing labels at Famous Labels, originally Goody's, which closed in 2009.  I could see at least a Books-A-Million here, but Shoe Show is more likely (boring).  Photo by Dustin Ransdell taken June 15, 2011.

The future of Rock Hill Galleria is tough to predict.  Without any big name players interested in the mall such as Simon, it will definitely have more trouble attracting big name tenants, but its strength is in its current department store anchors and market, which is still growing even during a recession.  In order for the mall to catch up to its competition in Pineville, the mall will need to broaden and upscale its offerings, which will be hard to do with a one-level mall competing with a two level mall while also considerably further from Uptown Charlotte.


While I do not put this mall on a death watch at this point, I will definitely say that further growth in the area is needed to make it competitive.  I will also say that the mall needs to find anchors and tenants that make shoppers see the mall as an alternative to Carolina Place.  Basically, the mall should be good enough they will not need to drive out out of their way to shop at the other mall all the time.  The ways I see this is possible is to bring in another department store such as Dillard's or Macy's (most likely in the place of Sears eventually), expand the mall, renovate the mall to make it extra showy and bringing in big box anchors such as the fore-mentioned Dicks's Sporting Goods, Best Buy, Petsmart, Barnes & Noble and Target.  Wal-Mart is also not likely helping the mall and could possibly be encouraged to relocate, freeing the space for anchors like the ones i mentioned.  What the mall may not bring in with higher end merchandise it can make up with diverse, fun store offerings to provide a more all-in-one experience.  This will help to fill in the dark stores within and make it more competitive.  As for right now, Rock Hill Galleria is still a moderately successful mall, but it will have to strive to better market itself if there is ever any hope the public will view it as a true shopping destination.

Friday, January 1, 2010

Dutch Square Mall: Columbia, SC

I hope everyone had a great holiday! I took a much needed break from posting, but am back to start the new year right with a new post, new mall and new city!

Childhood memories of malls by and large involved Georgia malls for me, but there is one notable exception: Dutch Square Mall.  In time, I have attempted to learn more about this mall that remained vaguely in my memories for years since I briefly called Columbia home.  At the time, I lived in West Columbia close to Columbiana Mall, but the year was 1986 and Columbiana was still in the planning stages.  Because of that, Dutch Square was still very much the place to shop in the Irmo/West Columbia area, which has remained one of the fastest growing and most prosperous areas of Columbia since the time I lived there 23 years ago.  However, Dutch Square itself has changed considerably as the neighborhoods around it have aged and competition has marginalized it while the mall itself has changed little in layout since it was built.


Dutch Square was first built in 1969 as the second major shopping mall in the state.  That seems laughable today with only 650,000 square feet of retail space, but in fact Dutch Square is actually amazing on how it survived as the smallest regional mall in a city that evolved into having four regional shopping malls.  I reason that loyalty means a lot, because while it is an ailing mall it survived 20 years past the opening of Columbiana only four exits up I-26.  To me, one of the most interesting things about the mall today is the fact that it is built on top of a hill with a constant slope through the mall.  In fact, the slope in the mall is some places uneven enough it almost makes me wonder if the place sunk at some point.  What is also interesting, though, is the keystone Belk store at the mall, which opened as Augusta-based J.B. White.  This was no ordinary White's, either, featuring three levels of merchandise.  At the time it was built, it was Columbia's second suburban White's location.  Unfortunately, Belk closed the third level not long after taking over the store in 1998.


Pictures do not do adequate justice showing the constant slopes through the mall.  I am not quite sure why they felt the need to build ramped sections all through the mall like that.  Columbiana and the Richway malls were like that, too.  The first photo is of the center court area.

 

Front main entrance corridor.  The doors on the front look straight-up 1969, but the renovations have toned it down a bit.  This mall was extremely dark in the 80's.

Dutch Square also contained one of three locations of Columbia-based Tapp's, an upscale department store that formed the opposite end of the mall from White's.  More distinct, though, was the third anchor of the mall, a Woolco discount store flanking the south side of the mall.  The mall also contained a two-level Annabelle's restaurant, though I have no recollection of where this was at or when it closed.  I know it was still operational as late as 1990, because I ate there with my parents and some friends of the family.  I recall it outside of an anchor, so I'm presuming White's.  In the last visit, I saw a big empty junior anchor next to Belk, but it looked more to be the size of a Goody's or McCrory's in lieu of the restaurant I remember.  Due to its vintage, the mall also has many stores with both interior and exterior entrances mostly on the front of the mall.


AMC Theaters flank the east end of the mall, which was the mall entrance to Tapp's for most of its existance.  That kid there seemed very odd sitting there just staring by himself.  Who lets their kids do that anymore?  This place probably won't still be standing when he gets to be my age...if he actually does.


Entrance to Burlington Coat Factory, previously Woolco and Brendle's.  Woolco anchored malls typically did not do well, but this was not the focus of the mall nor its strength.  This Burlington Coat Factory arrived around 1999 after Brendle's closed in the same location.  Brendle's and Office Depot subdivided the location much in the way they did Sky City at Innsbruck Mall in Asheville.


Belk has been on a spree lately renovating their mall entrances.  I absolutely hate it when they do that, too.  I wonder what this looked like when White's was still there.

Dutch Square was relatively small, but it had help across I-26 on the same Bush River Road with Bush River Mall, a much smaller mall anchored by Kroger and Richway.  Bush River opened eight years after Dutch Square opened, but its small size and discount anchors were never a threat to the mall.  This meant that anything that couldn't fit into Dutch Square could find space across the interstate, and the two malls complimented each other for years resulting in a red-hot retail corridor throughout the 1970's and 1980's.  The mall at first had no competition until Columbia Place opened in 1978.  However, .the location of Columbia Place completely across the city maintained a balance that had no effect on the mall.


A view from Burlington Coat Factory to the back entrance.  A built-in makeshift food court flanks the court ahead.  To the right is AMC and to the left is the long haul to Belk.

 

 

Looking toward the back entrance at the food court area (first photo) and back into the food court (second photo).  A Chinese restaurant is to my right.

In these successful years, only one major change occurred as third anchor Woolco went bankrupt in 1983, which was quickly absorbed by catalog merchant Brendle's and Office Depot, which subdivided the store.  As a result, Office Depot had no connection to the interior mall.  Office Depot may have previously been an A&P since information I ran across suggested it was at the mall in the 80's.  The prominent position of Dutch Square changed, though, when Columbiana Center opened in Irmo a few exits up in 1990 after two decades of dominance.  Richland Fashion Mall also opened a year prior, but its unique positioning and anchor line-up did not have as much of an impact as Columbiana.


Looking back at center court from the other direction.  As empty as it was looking in this photo, it is strange to realize how swamped this mall was as late as 1989.

Columbiana Center did not seem to have a dramatic effect on Dutch Square right away.  Uniquely, the two malls actually at first looked like they would compliment each other.  The only anchors the two malls shared were White's, and White's thankfully decided never to close their three-story store at Dutch Square.  In fact, it looked like the mall's fortunes may actually have begun to improve at that point.  That is because in 1990 the downtown Macy's, which was a legacy Atlanta-based Davison's, was looking to move from downtown to Dutch Square complete with an expansion.  As the old downtown Macy's store prepared to close, the plans were set to build a larger three level, 220,000 square feet Macy's at Dutch Square complete with an expansion.  The plans were set in 1992 to have the store opened by the following year, making Dutch Square a tough contender in the market.  Unfortunately, something happened and the project never came to fruition.  It should be noted that at the same time, RH Macy Co. was preparing to go bankrupt only to be "saved" by then-Federated Department Stores, which operates Macy's of today.  Federated Department Stores, which already owned then-Rich's at Columbia Place, was apparently uninterested in building at the mall.


A look at the second back wing containing Piccadilly Cafeteria.

 

Piccadilly Cafeteria opened as Morrison's and was converted to Piccadilly when Morrison's was purchased in 1995.

The 1990's saw many changes at the mall.  First was the bankruptcy of Tapp's in fall of 1995.  This closure left an obvious void at the mall, which was not left vacant for long.  Instead of waiting to bring in Macy's or another department store, the owners simply demolished the Tapp's and rebuilt the location as an AMC theater.  In the late 90's, Annabelle's left the mall as well.  The next change was in 1998 when Belk acquired the White's location at the mall in lieu of Dillard's, who had just bought out White's.  Last was the arrival of Burlington Coat Factory in 1999 after Brendle's went bankrupt in 1995.  Burlington Coat Factory left flagging Bush River Mall to join the mall.  Ironically, Burlington Coat Factory absorbed many of the prime Woolco locations in the early 1980's and still operates in many of those old Woolco stores today so even though they arrived late it was a natural fit.. This swap was because Dillard's sought other locations owned by Belk at that point.  This was for the best, because Belk at the mall has remained a draw.  The mall also was renovated in that time period, losing its 1970's trappings such as the dark linoleum tiles.  The Belk, however, has apparently not changed at all, still maintaining the same appearance as when it operated as White's.  Considering the colorless, boring remodels of today, that is actually somewhat pleasing to see.


Dutch Square, plain and simple.  Macy's, they need you here.  You promised them.


Looking down the mall toward Belk.  It always puzzles me why if a mall is ailing, the emptiest part of the mall is the Belk wing.  The whole mall tilts downhill toward Belk.  Hopefully that's nothing symbolic.

Twenty years after Columbiana Center opened, Dutch Square amazingly lingers on.  Bush River Mall, near the mall, has long since died and been demolished, now operating as a nearly new Wal-Mart despite the fact the area around the mall is looking somewhat empty.  The redevelopment of that site has undoubtedly been helpful since anchor Target left to join the retail explosion around Columbiana Center.  Regardless, the fact is that Dutch Square has an excellent location just southeast of the intersection of I-20 and I-26.  Indeed, the mall today is looking emptier than past visits with a relatively high level of vacancies.  However, the fact that the mall is the oldest in the city and has survived after being eclipsed by two other malls says that it has definite staying power.


White's in general had a very distinct way of doing escalators.  The down escalator was staggered slightly offset and thus lower than the up escalator, and they ran side by side.  While this works in two level stores, I can see this was problematic for this store, which operated three levels under White's.  The lights above suggest those upper escalators, but when I came up to them, I could see they were clearly walled off.  A dark third level in a store is always creepy.


On the outside, White's stores built in the 70's were stately but dirt plain.  This store featured the older elegant script "White's" logo in lieu of the "J.B. WHITE" in skinny black letters found on the last generation stores.

The owners should remember what almost happened in 1993 with Macy's as well as the fact that they are holding ground in an over-malled environment.  Perhaps they should consider expanding the mall again, tearing down a nearby shopping center and building a multi-level expansion.  Columbia still only has one Macy's location, and the one currently operational is in a struggling mall.  Since only two of four malls in the city are likely to survive, it is my hope that Macy's will consider joining either this mall or Richland in lieu of other horizons.  Now would be the opportunity to lure in Macy's as well as a few other stores under-represented in the area to keep Columbiana and the new lifestyle center on the other side of town from completely dominating the Columbia retail scene.  Perhaps Burlington Coat Factory should be replaced by a Borders Books and some new stores introduced into the market at the mall.  Dutch Square Mall turned 40 years old last year, so it deserves some attention after serving the city longer than any other mall.


 

I am betting these were renovated original signs, because signs this tall are typically not allowed today.   As you can see, the front highway sign lists all the major stores...well almost.  I do not recall where West Marine was in the mall.  I think listing Piccadilly Cafeteria would have been preferable to the dubious "Super China Buffet".  I'm guessing Super China Buffet was previously a sign for Annabelle's.  Maybe that's why Macy's opted out.


Never dare to let the mall entrance retain a vintage look...at least in mall management world.  This 90's stucco monstrosity is supposed to fool you into thinking this mall is not as old as it looks.  It usually takes more than a facelift to bring a person back to youthful beauty, and likewise it usually takes more than a stucco entrance blob to hide the real age of a mall.  The problem is, plastic surgery is a lot cheaper than a major mall overhaul.  Is this the equivalent of mall botox?


Luckily, the front side (or back?) doesn't go as overboard with the stucco.  I really like the stores with the outside entrances.  You typically find that in the oldest malls, and I think it casts a positive light on the mall.  Note Belk/White's in the background.


Burlington Coat Factory, an anchor to the mall since 1999 opened as Woolco, which went bankrupt in late 1982.  The store was subdivided in the 1980's between Brendle's and another store, which is today Office Depot.  Burlington Coat Factory absorbed the location in 1999.  The small vertical grooves in the brick are a dead giveaway of its Woolco origin.