Showing posts with label Woolworth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woolworth. Show all posts

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Signal Hill Mall: Statesville, NC (Update of post from January 16, 2011)

Barely large enough to support a mall, the city of Statesville, NC has still managed to have its very own mall. Problem is, not only is the mall quite small, but it does not seem to be doing terribly well these days. It is an attractive mall, though, for its size. It also holds onto most of its original wonderful 70's elements such as the planters, fountains and just about everything else aside from the anchor entrances to Belk and Sears. The mall opened in 1973 and likewise the mall still looks like 1973 inside and out barring a few modifications such as one of the fountains near Belk being covered, planters downsized, different paint and updated storefronts. For Signal Hill Mall, the combination of dated design, small size and a loss of many stores in the mall has made it rather popular with both fans of dead malls and fans of classic mall design. Its website, however, is quite ugly and the description of the mall rather strongly highlights the lack of a marketing consultant. It is not even clear who even owns the mall!


"We might not be the largest mall, or the most exciting shopping and entertainment destination in North Carolina. Signal Hill Mall, a beautiful gem, located in the rolling foothills of North Carolina, brings you the the fashion, dining and family entertainment options in an eccentric setting". Let us decipher this passage. First, they are putting themselves down in that first sentence. Then, they counteract that with an exaggerated statement in the next sentence. I guess they have small town fashion down pat since the anchors are holding steady, but I think the dining has diminished a bit with Chick-Fil-A gone. However, IHOP and the local barbeque restaurant hopefully make up for that somewhat. Family entertainment I guess means those gumball machines and kiddie rides that you sometimes find even in abandoned malls, but it seems that here you can be a little bold and try out their hurricane simulator. Too bad they don't have a tornado simulator. While you're pretending to be blown away and drowned in a storm surge, don't break your teeth on the gumballs. The last part, "an eccentric setting" is a little scary. Do we mean panhandlers, pot enthusiasts, bohemians from an anemic arts district or just a colorful term for a redneck? I think we should award this mall with the best advertising ever.



The smaller of two fountains in the mall is located in front of JCPenney and the former Spainhour's, which both make entrances at an angle from the mall wing. The first photo is a night-shot of the classic brutalist entrance. I sincerely hope the owners do not remove all of the fountains.



Another view of the fountain looking south along the JCPenney wing toward the main entrance. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.


A view back along the JCPenney wing with JCPenney and Spainhour's in the background. Note one of the many planters in the mall with the light blue painted wood and brown tiles surrounding it.


JCPenney at a right diagonal.


Spainhour's visible on the left diagonal. A wall with an American flag divides the two anchors.


Close-up of JCPenney mall entrance. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.


Close-up of Spainhour's mall entrance. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.


Right in front of Spainhour's and JCPenney on both sides are these narrow entrance wings. Notice how the overhead light forms a long arrow. Also note the mix of brown tiles and pea gravel flooring along the floor leading to the exit. Too bad this hallway doesn't double as a time machine.

I actually visited this mall after writing the initial post on this, so finally getting to see it was a treat. It was also even more archaic than I expected. In fact, the only other mall I know of that Sky City covers that looks this original has been sealed off for 10 years. I guess some people would consider this seedy, but seeing things like well-placed brown linoleum floor tiles, large in-floor fountains, lush planters, cylindrical light fixtures pea gravel step walls and ancient storefronts was a real treat. Unfortunately, a look like this is not going to keep the tenants forever. Sears is closing in early 2012, so something needs to be done to make this mall more appealing without making it dirt plain like the Hull Storey Gibson malls. If nothing else, the owners should keep the fountains and planters including uncovering and making the fountain in front of Belk more safe, although modernizing the fountains somewhat (perhaps larger) would be much appreciated. Beautiful fountains are rare in malls today, but this should be one mall that doesn't remove them.




Three views of the fountain in center court. This is what I expect to see when I see a fountain a mall: an in-ground large tub-like fountain with a distinctive modernist design with water falling off the edges and plants all around. The first photo is looking toward Sears, second toward JCPenney and last towards the main entrance. All three photos by Mike Kalasnik.


A close-up shot of the funky old fountain in center court.


Row of mostly empty shops on left side of Sears wing. The empty store with the red outline was a former Kay Bee Toys. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.


Close up of Kay-Bee Toys with Labelscar visible. Along with Circus World, these were a staple of malls up to the 1990's despite the presence of Toys 'R' Us and Lionel Play World. A loss of variety including stores like this are one reason malls are struggling today. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.


The raised "stage" area in the JCPenney wing features light blue paint on the wood trim and pea gravel on the side. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.


A closer look at the stage area. While interesting, this seems to serve absolutely no purpose at all.

The mall's three anchors are pretty much what you would expect in North Carolina in a smaller town: Belk, Sears and JCPenney. The mall also once had a fourth anchor, which last operated as Peeble's. Peeble's was configured very strangely in the mall squeezed up beside JCPenney in the back of the mall.  This was done in a 1988 expansion which moved the Spainhour's in order to add JCPenney, converting the former Spainhour's into mall space. Also, on an outlot on the northwest corner of the mall is a vacant grocery store that previously operated as Winn-Dixie. It should also be noted that despite this generic list of anchors that there were a few changes over the years. While Belk and JCPenney are original anchors, the other mall anchors proved to be far more volatile. Sears is a late arrival to the mall, opening in 1997. The Sears was originally Woolworth (more like a junior Woolco) and it closed in 1992. In 1995, it was replaced by Hills Department Store only to close the following year. Sadly, Sears will be closing this spring in the same location. Peeble's, the other anchor to close, operated as Spainhour's until 1992. Peeble's itself closed about 10 years after it arrived, completely leaving the city. The store remains vacant today. IHOP also replaced a restaurant called Apple House Buffet which apparently was originally a Bonanza Steakhouse.


Belk features an updated entrance in total contrast to the mall's surroundings. It is at least a positive sign that Belk has made a real investment in the store even if it means a standard post-2000 mall entrance. Also note the red patch in the middle. This is a boarded-over deep fountain that is visible in the second of two videos I linked to below. I hope if this mall gets remodeled this fountain is uncovered and some nice railing put around it to keep people from falling in so we can see it again.


The same planter in the earlier photo on the JCPenney wing looking instead toward center court. The left side shown here shows there is still life in the mall. I'm sure like Lenoir Mall, GNC will be the one shutting out the lights if everything else here leaves.


Sears mall entrance with round planter in front. I'm pretty sure Hibbett Sports was probably next to Sears on the right along this wing.



One thing you didn't find in 70's malls was "plush" seating. This backless bench looks like the place where sometime in the 80's a middle aged man was plopped down staring sullenly into space waiting for the wife with stars in her eyes and a furious click to her heels to charge up his credit card.


Ramps and stairs are found on both sides of center court with Belk lower than Sears.



Bookland, the rare small format Books-A-Million, at least keeps a bookstore in the mall. I wonder if a full-scale Books-A-Million couldn't be squeezed in between the soon-to-be-former Sears and center court since it looks like outside access does exist there.



I am still trying to figure out this very very dated former tenant. The only thing that comes to mind is Wicks 'N' Sticks.


This store front has a label scar, but I cannot remember what it said and am having trouble telling from the photo at this angle. The fact it is clad with wood paneling says it has been closed for possibly as much as 20 years. It seems like I remember it saying "Happy Hermans".

Sadly, once you get past IHOP or enter the mall from the department stores, there is not much to offer in this mall anymore. Absolutely no popular fashion stores exist in the mall. Even Rue 21 lacks a presence in the mall, so it is clear that the mall will not have a lengthy future if it is not repositioned or at least marketed better, and the main problem is that it is plainly too small and dated in a town that is likewise possibly too small to support it despite the anchors. I wonder if it is also an issue of the local economy. The town is in a region that has been badly hurt by the offshoring of jobs and subsequent closing of factories. Strip centers that have popped up in the last decade both have stores like GameStop. Does the mall have a GameStop? Nope. Nevertheless, it is well-located next to I-77, so basically it suffers from the Cookeville curse. My guess is that a strip mall with those same anchors would probably be more successful, and it looks like the culprit to the malls vacancy problem is the explosion of new strip malls around the city in the past few years when Signal Hill once owned the market. Wal-Mart as well as the recently built strip just to the east with Bi-Lo both caused the bleeding to occur, and likely the lack of investment in the mall is a combination of small, local ownership lacking the leverage to draw tenants and a lack of need to invest in an extensive remodel before the retail boom in the past decade.




Before this post was updated, the post featured 7 separate short videos of Signal Hill Mall by Mike Kalasnik taken in May 2010. With his help, I compiled those clips into one adding captions to describe diferent places filmed. This is my first attempt at compiling a video and posted them on the new YouTube channel for Sky City.


A friend found this footage taken of the mall in its far better days back in 1991. Note the presence of a deep fountain next to Belk, Woolworth and Spainhours still operational, warm orange trim and a fully tenanted healthy mall. Seeing the video above first makes this painful to watch. The person taking video also has video walking around the Woolworth as well as further footage inside the Woolworth Harvest House restaurant in the store.



In the first photo, Signal Hill Mall's entrance is firmly trapped in the 70's, and it looks just fine. The geometric shapes and loopy font is actually very eye-catching. The first photo was submitted to me by Mike Kalasnik. In the second photo, this is actually from the 70's. It is from LiveMalls courtesy of Pat Richardson. Note the Woolworth's located where Sears is today and the Spainhour's logo next to the JCPenney logo.


Spainhour's labelscar is visible from the front of the mall if the light is right. The sign rests above the mall near the main entrance.


A map of the mall with all anchors current and former listed. The last store occupying an anchor is listed first with previous anchors listed below it.



A map of the mall as it is today. Note the awesome logo at the bottom. This map may date to the early days of the mall. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.


The mall features several styles of overhead skylights including this one close to Sears.


The mall is trying on an international flavor with POHI! Here you can get scrambled egg samosas and salmon teriyaki burritos. In the background is the front/main entrance.

With Signal Hill Mall, I see some very creative potential to make this mall more competitive with the strip malls that have wounded the mall. While I do not see Target coming to town, what I do see is a strip mall next door in desperate need of redevelopment. It is dragging down the mall, and it should become one with the mall somehow or have its dead parts demolished. What I am basically talking in regards to "one with the mall" about is integrating a pedestrian corridor between the two centers via an open-air but covered walkway by expanding the mall either through or in front of Belk into the strip mall. I also see a pitiful website that scares away those wishing to invest in the mall. Small upgrades to the mall like new paint (such as a return to the burnt orange), new flooring, improvements to the main mall entrance and refurbishment (not removal) of fountains, benches and planters inside would help as well. I would at least suggest replacing the off-white square tiles that look dingy and plain with more attractive flooring (perhaps a slate-looking tile?).


In case you missed the joke above, POHI is what you see above. Whlie hardly first-class dining, it is at least a chain restaurant willing to anchor the mall. Photo by Mike Kalasnik.



On this overhang, JCPenney is right justified while Spainhour's labelscar is on the left. Apparently Peeble's did not post a sign up here judging by the lack of their label scar.


Belk runs the show as the top dog anchor of the mall. If Belk leaves for any reason, the mall will fold like a gambler with a bad hand. Note that the mall appears to have had canopies removed underneath the arches.



Will anything come to fill the void Sears is about to leave behind? If nothing else, I could see Rose's working here though I hope for something better, more unique and more of a draw.



Spainhour's looks lonely and forgotten hidden in the least visible corner of the mall. This store should honestly be absorbed into JCPenney to strengthen JCPenney's position at the mall.


If JCPenney closes this store on the heels of Sears closing, this mall will be near impossible to save. It is quite possibly one of the plainest JCPenney stores I've ever seen, and if the renovated and combined with Spainhour's space, it could be far better. If JCPenney leaves, Kohl's or Hamrick's should take this space.


View of Winn-Dixie store on northeast corner of the mall. Does anybody know when this might have closed?


One of the long, narrow mall exits in the mall. This one is next to Belk.

As Sears prepares to depart the mall, this will either be a disaster for the mall or an opportunity to make it better. Toying with many plans, the plan that makes the most sense is to build a new 2-level Belk on top of what is now Newtowne Plaza, converting the old Belk to mall space with an additional junior anchor.  From the old Belk, a small amount of mall would be built connecting the upper level of Belk to the mall.  JCPenney would also move into the old Sears, and the existing JCPenney and abandoned Peeble's would be demolished.  Along with that, Newtowne Plaza would be reconfigured to include another grocery or discount anchor and the theater would be demolished.  The old Harris Teeter would be refinished and subdivided as well.  Doing this would make the mall viable and marketable again since the current mall is too old, small and poorly configured.  Possible anchors to add to the mall include Dunham's Sporting Goods, Hamrick's, Ingles (in the strip portion), Peeble's/Burke's Outlet, Wal-Mart, Target, Academy Sports, Cabela's among others.  The new mall addition should also be designed more lush than modern malls with a new fountain, wood along the ceiling, lots of natural light (high windows and an overhead skylight) and integrated with the older part of the mall.  Indeed, Signal Hill is troubled, but with Belk and JCPenney hanging on this is the last chance for the mall to pull out and have another shot at success. Do the people in the town just prefer strip malls? They are lucky to have a mall, but it is up to them to make the once great mall great again, and it will take a really sound plan to save it. At nearly 40 years old, the people of Statesville should fight to keep this little gem from dying. Maybe this was what the mall website meant when it talked about "an eccentric setting".

Update (1/6/2025): Signal Hill Mall remained open into the 2020's, but began to decay terribly in that time with visible mold and water damage throughout that was tough to breathe. Even with that, the center court fountain would continue to operate up to the point it closed in 2024. When the last four stores left, the mall was closed and interior gutted. Demolition of the mall is likely in the near future.


The first redevelopment plan is pretty ambitious with an unusual layout.  It calls for two department store anchors, one sporting goods anchor, one discount or grocery anchor where JR's is currently and one junior department store anchor.  It retains much of Newtowne Plaza but reconfigures it demolishing the old Harris Teeter to make Belk fully visible from the road.  Belk will have two mall entrances, the lower level of the mall will be open-air with stairs and escalator to the back wing and the mall will have greatly expanded space.  However, the back anchor will have no visibility from the road.


The second redevelopment plan is more economical and more likely basically converting the Belk to a combination of a junior anchor and mall space.  It includes a small mall addition to connect to a new Belk in Newtowne Plaza from the upper level of the replacement Belk.  It also includes a complete overhaul of Newtowne Plaza and demolition of the back anchor that currently includes an undersized JCPenney.  The plan here makes the mall more front-facing and offers the ability to turn Newtowne Plaza into a lifestyle center.  In both plans, the existing JCPenney and former Spainhour's is demolished, JCPenney relocates into the old Sears/Woolworth, Belk becomes an expanded mall and a new 2-level Belk store is built on what is currently a portion of Newtowne Plaza.  The two levels are needed due to the grade difference between the strip and the mall, and in the second plan Belk will provide the only access from Newtowne Plaza to the mall by foot.

Saturday, July 1, 2006

North Dekalb Mall: Decatur, GA

It is always interesting when a long-outmoded mall somehow survives over 50 years showing that the local community loved it as long as it could. North DeKalb Center, as it was originally known, opened in July 1965 as Atlanta's first enclosed mall followed very shortly by Columbia Mall on Memorial Drive to the south. As a mall that once advertised its year-round perfect weather, it indeed weathered many new malls opening while even outlasting malls of similar vintage like Columbia and Cobb Center. In 2024, the end arrived as demolition began of what was left of the interior mall that itself was closed in 2020. 

The original configuration of the mall was an H-shaped center with Rich's on the east end and three anchors on the west end: a Storey theater on the south, Woolworth's in the middle facing the main mall corridor, and Colonial Stores on the north end. Inline junior anchors included high-end Regenstein's department store (their only mall-based location) and Henderson Furniture (which also had a location at Town & Country Shopping Center in Marietta). I was unable to determine exactly where these two stores were located in the mall, but I am assuming at least one was adjacent to Rich's on the south side due to the building jutting out more compared to the rest of the stores along the south block. The land for the mall was originally purchased by Rich's earlier in the 1960's, and the mall was developed by D. Scott Hudgins who was famous for developing many of Atlanta's major malls.

Its early years were successful serving the growing suburbs from Decatur northward, but it quickly lost its regional status when other bigger, better malls were built in the region including direct competition from Northlake Mall, completed in 1971. Historicaerials.com has a photo of the mall in its original configuration. Architectural drawings and outside aerial photos show that the mall had about three court areas with arched high window skylights and smaller overhead skylights with the court in front of Rich's reaching two stories high to allow patrons of the Magnolia Room to overlook the east mall court from the second floor. A similar design was employed at Greenbriar Mall, which opened one year after North DeKalb.



The first and second photos both are of the east court, featuring this big clock. The corridor to the left (original mall) in the first photo heads to the Macy's (former Rich's). In the second photo, Macy's is to the right. The second photo is one of the two Ross mall entrances.

What was remarkable is that North DeKalb lasted as long as it did, but Hudgins still owned the mall in the 1980's and wasn't content to let it die. With its then very dated design (because back then 20 years might as well have been 100), small size, and maintenance issues plaguing the center, Hudgins partnered with Cadillac Fairview to restructure the entire mall with both a new design and new layout to better compete with what was by then four other malls within a relatively short distance. The update also would add 200,000 square feet increasing it from just under 450,000 square feet to just over 650,000 square feet. Although I cannot confirm when they left, it appears that Colonial Stores (by then Big Star) and Regenstein's both left sometime in the early 80's with Regenstein's still there as late as 1981 [1]. Woolworth would close for the redevelopment, but it did not appear that they chose to reopen after initially claims that they would [2]. However, it cannot be discounted that having Rich's as the primary anchor when the nearest competitor did not have one really made a difference: Northlake had Sears, JCPenney, and Davison's...but not Rich's. If not for Rich's continued success, North DeKalb would likely have been demolished and redeveloped by the late 1980's or early 1990's most likely into a strip center. In fact, Cadillac Fairview officials were quoted as saying that the success of Rich's was the primary reason they worked to save the ailing mall [3].




First photo is looking back down the main corridor to the Macy's mall entrance (Rich's mall entrance shown below). Second photo is looking out on the longest (east) wing with Macy's behind me. Last photo is of the mall corridor extending from the east court to south court.

In 1986, the renovations and reconfiguration of North DeKalb Mall were completed with the mall renamed "Market Square at North DeKalb". This renovation reconfigured the H design into T-shape with a central diamond where the mall could maximize space, fit in a food court inside part of the diamond, and add anchors all largely within the existing footprint. Shoppers who originally could walk straight from Rich's to Woolworth would then have to navigate around angular corridors to do so. The renovation brought with it new anchors that were also new to the market as well: Mervyn's, and Lechmere. At the time both Mervyn's and Lechmere were divisions of Dayton-Hudson with one being a clothing store similar to JCPenney while Lechmere focused largely on electronics and sporting goods. As Dayton-Hudson began its evolution into Target, it would shed stores like Mervyn's and Lechmere in the process resulting in these stores eventually fading away. Eventually Burlington Coat Factory would replace Mervyn's after they left the market in 1996 while Rhodes Furniture would replace Phar-Mor that itself had replaced Lechmere. The mall's original cinema was also replaced with a 16 screen AMC theater. Ross and Stein Mart would also take up inline space by the 2000's. The timing of the mall's update was critical considering that the nearest Rich's at Belvedere Plaza, the only location not in an enclosed mall, closed in January 1986. Had the mall not gotten the huge boost it did, Rich's might have relocated that store to another mall - most likely Northlake.

It should be pointed out that the update of North Dekalb Center into "Market Square" followed a typical pattern of older first-generation malls in the late 1980's that were taking drastic measures to survive with limited options due to lack of available land to expand and locations that had become less ideal due to since-completed interstates removing traffic from them. This was less of an issue for this mall given that US 78 remained a major through route and that the Stone Mountain Freeway was later extended to end right at the mall giving it easy access to I-285, Atlanta's beltway that would be completed a few years after the mall opened. As to these early mall redevelopments, they would frequently accept anchors that were unknown to the market, were less popular, or were not traditional (such as big box stores), would massively renovate the interior (or enclose a strip or open-air mall), and often would change the name to attempt to shed any negative perceptions of the mall. Cobb Center had a similar makeover/renaming in 1987. The updates almost always added more light to the mall by putting in larger skylights, adopting brighter, softer materials and colors, and in some cases adding neon lighting as well. 


Saved 2009 directory from the mall's now defunct website showing the odd configuration of the mall.  It was this design that made me really want to see this mall for myself considering that I had never seen it prior to 2004.

By then, malls were beginning to saturate their markets, and the older malls really were not positioned to survive against demographic shifts, new mega malls, massive bankruptcies and consolidation in the department store industry, and increased competition from off-mall category killers that did not exist when the malls first opened. These older malls also lacked the land to build larger malls without great expense, and it would take the attracting of upscale stores to justify that cost. North DeKalb did well to attract Mervyn's and Lechmere, but these were both stores that did not need malls as much as the malls needed them. By the 1980's, the most popular malls were anchored by established chains or higher end stores, and these older malls usually only had one or two stores like that, in this case Rich's. Although the mall never regained its destination status, the change did buy the mall over 30 more years! That's not bad considering that North DeKalb 2.0 outlasted 1.0 by more than a decade.




Photos include view of south court, view looking down the southeast wing and view looking down the south wing. The southeast wing is really strange: it is part of the mall itself but also a store. While it has a pseudo entrance, the walkway through it is mall while the stuff on each sides is the store. This was a Rhodes Furniture when I visited in 2004. Today it is a local furniture store. The south wing (last photo) is the wing to AMC Theaters that originally opened as a Lechmere.

In the early 2000's, "Market Square" was quietly renamed back to North DeKalb Mall. By the middle of the decade, North DeKalb was also becoming very troubled. It's once exciting roster of new anchors was constantly being shaken up by bankruptcies/liquidations such as Lechmere in 1989, Mervyn's in 1995, and Rhodes Furniture in 2005. With time, the mall was looking more and more like a regular strip center with an enclosed walkway, and small tenants were fading away while its anchors began exploring their nearby options as well. It also didn't help when Rich's merged companies with Macy's in 1995 then consolidated the two stores into one 2005. The Macy's (former Rich's) at the mall was then in direct competition with the Macy's (former Davison's) at Northlake resulting in both stores cannibalizing each other for sales weakening both malls further. The construction of the Mall at Stonecrest in 2001 also took shoppers away leaving both malls to very slowly die. A plan by Hendon Properties in the early 2000's involved adding a Costco as an anchor to the mall with a parking deck, but that fell through after nearby neighborhoods fought the plan over flooding concerns. Eventually, Hendon would give up on the mall and sell the property.




The Food Court makes up the west court of the mall. The first photo is approaching it from the side and the second features the huge domed skylight over the main seating area. The last is looking back from the food court to the west (rear) entrance. Note the Applebee's on the left. This is approximately where the original Woolworth's was located.

It was fairly obvious when I first documented this mall as early as 2005 that it was terminal. What I did not know is how long it would take. It wasn't until 2016 that (the rather run down) Macy's finally closed their store, but that legacy Rich's was a keystone to the mall. Hollywood would use the mall as a filming location during that time for dystopian flicks, but Hollywood could not revive the ailing center which would finally close in 2020. However, that closure should not be seen as completely sad given that the mall managed a very long life for a second-tier center. It lasted 55 years when in its early configuration it might not have even lasted 30 years. My own system of mall success has tiers, and a "50-year mall" is generally a huge success while a "30-year mall" is a mall that never quite caught on. North DeKalb found its niche, and it worked for a long, long time.

The redevelopment plan will be yet another mixed-use urban village, and rest assured it will be as inspiring as a box of store-brand corn flakes. Unfortunately, times have changed in ways that are pretty miserable, and an expansive B-mall catering to a broad middle class living in single family homes with disposable income has been edged out of the modern paradigm consumed by corporatism and its associated depressed wages and sky-high living costs. Nearly every facet of the mall had become outdated and outmoded as decades passed, and the land it was sitting on likewise became way more valuable than the mall itself. While I'm pretty sure the new development will do fine, this full circle back to the bad old days of overcrowded, overpriced urban living vs. the expansive suburbs with nice malls full of nice stores is why so many felt their eyes tear up as the wrecking ball tore into this tarnished palace of retail. 




First photo is view of the north court followed by photos of the north wing to Burlington Coat Factory (former Mervyn's) and northeast wing to parking lot (Ross comes off of this wing as well).



This photo is looking from east court (at the clock) to north court.

And now for a look back in time to late 2004 and early 2005 at Rich's just prior to the changeover:


Rich's mall entrance prior to the changeover.



Two views of the south entrance to Rich's. This was the best preserved part of the original facade. Note the letters mounted on poles!


Rich's north entrance falls short of original, but luckily the green signs were retained in the 1986 renovation. Note that the display windows next to the door were covered up as well as the original arched awning. That is still visible underneath the ugly stucco cover.



The east side features two entrances. The one-story wing entrance was completely original. The second photo focuses more on it.


The last daytime shot of Rich's focuses on the auto center. It, too, was completely original from 1965.

Now for some night shots:



Rich's southeast entrance at night. Note the lightbulbs under the arch.



Rich's east entrance at night. The lower sign is in better shape because it is newer: note the forementioned stucco awning.


One more look at the south entrance: this time at night. This is my favorite angle of the store. The Macy's sign that is here now is in a big white box in lieu of these poles.

* Original post dated July 2, 2006, updates on January 6-7, 2025*

[1] The Atlanta Journal; Sunday, April 26, 1981, Page 104
[2] The Atlanta Journal; Friday, December 27, 1985, Page 9
[3] The Atlanta Journal; Thursday, September 11, 1986, Page 155