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

11 January 2025

Springdale Mall, Mobile, AL

 A dead mall


My only experiences in Alabama’s oldest city involved brief stays at their airport which itself reminded me of a retro mall with its brick walls, large court area in the center, and lofty ceilings.  However, like most shopping malls with the same features, the terminal will soon be replaced.  Just down the road on Airport Boulevard sits the main retail district of the Port City.  At the northeastern quadrant of the thoroughfare’s crossing with I-64 lies its first enclosed shopping complex, The Shoppes at Bel Air.  And just across the street is what used to be its main indoor rival, Springdale Mall.


1- The early Springdale Plaza.  2- McRae’s at Springdale Plaza under construction.  3 & 4- Interior shots of early mall (Source for all)

Springdale was what I refer to as a “walkthrough” mall, one where an anchor has to be traversed to reach another indoor corridor.  But there was just something about Springdale that I always admired, more so than its competitor with its earlier and simpler barbell design, and I wish I would have paid it a visit before all of the enclosed common areas were slowly eliminated over the years.

Springdale Mall lease plan ca. 1975.  View the full PDF version here.

Springdale Plaza opened in 1959 as an open air collection of shops, one of the first built within the city at the time.  WT Grant and JCPenney anchored the facility at its opening with Mobile based Gayfer’s department store debuting their flagship location at the midpoint of the center a year later.  Less than a decade later in 1967 its cross street rival, known as Bel Air Mall at the time, opened its doors.

Springdale Mall lease plan ca. 1990.  View the full PDF version here.

Responding to the appearance of this formidable competitor as well as its first expansion in 1974 poaching JCPenney from their lineup, Springdale Plaza embarked on an expansion of its own.  An indoor corridor of smaller specialty shops was added just to the east of Gayfer’s with Montgomery Ward anchoring the opposite end.  In 1984, McRae’s added their nameplate to the façade with the opening of their freestanding outlet to the west of Gayfer’s in 1984.


1 to 3- Interior shots of the enclosure before closing. (Source for all)  4- Lonely public telephones in the eastern mall. (Source)

In the latter part of the decade, Montgomery Ward downsized their footprint at Springdale Mall by subleasing the northwestern corner of their building to Toy R Us.  The following year a second indoor concourse was added to the west of the main facility connecting McRae’s and Gayfer’s.  At the same time, Gayfer’s expanded their store by nearly 200,000 square feet to serve as their main flagship location.

Springdale lease plan ca. 2003.  View the full PDF version here.

However, this time at peak indoor shopping mall didn’t last long for already forty year old facility.  The nineties brought the skyrocketing ascension of what was already a fairly old retail concept- the big box.  Beginning in the middle of this decade the center’s new owners, CBL and Associates of Chattanooga, started the gradual process of powercenter-ing what was by then simply called Springdale.  Old Navy and Barnes & Noble were among the first to move in.

Springdale lease plan ca. 2007.  View the full PDF version here.

CBL and Associates also completed the first major refresh of Springdale’s interior corridors.  Even with these expenditures, however, it was apparent that Springdale was losing the enclosed retail destination game to its seemingly ever-expanding competitor across the street.  Drastic changes were needed; and while at first the big boxes were finding homes in the exterior facing portions, demalling to make additional space was inevitable.


1- The Belk exterior. (Source)  2 to 4- the closed Springdale Cinemas, Best Buy and Old Navy outlets at Springdale. (Source for all)

Dillard’s, with a takeover of the Mobile-based brand and all of their branches, took over the 280,000 square foot Gayfer’s flagship in 1998.  But the Little Rock-based department store only lasted until 2003 when they bolted for, with absolutely no one surprised, Bel Air Mall.  Almost immediately, the one time flagship was darkened, closed, and unceremoniously demolished.  Today a Sam’s Club resides on the pad.


Springdale pamphlet ca. 2011.  View the full PDF version here.

More changes came in 1999 when Montgomery Ward shuttered their outlet allowing Burlington Coat Factory to move in not long after.  But bigger revisions were to follow as the newer western enclosed concourse was eliminated in 2001 and reconfigured to house Best Buy.  In 2006 McRae’s was rebranded as Belk while the larger eastern enclosed mall was being chipped away at piece by piece to accommodate more big boxes.


1- The former east mall entrance. (Source)  2- Springdale today. (Source)  3- Sam’s Club, built where Gayfer’s flagship used to stand. (Source)  4- Burlington’s outlet in the old Montgomery Ward space. (Source)

By the 2010s Springdale no longer contained any more interior concourses and ceased to be an enclosed shopping mall.  The power center assimilation was complete and the Port City was down to only a single enclosed retail destination, most than likely never to see another built.

Springdale Plaza lease plan ca. 2024.  View the full PDF version here.

09 June 2024

Shadybrook Mall, Columbia, TN

 A dead mall


In the nineties, the small city of Columbia, Tennessee was absolutely booming.  Located in between Nashville and Huntsville just off of I-65, the community of Spring Hill just to the north was awarded one of the first large scale automobile manufacturing plants in the south, the Saturn plant.

Goody’s.  (Source for both)

My uncle was employed there as an engineer upon its opening, so we made the short trek from Huntsville quite a few times to their cozy little subdivision just to the northern outskirts of the rapidly expanding town.  On one of my early visits to their abode, I got to visit for the first time a retail destination with which I would become very familiar, Shadybrook Mall.

Shadybrook Mall Mallmanac ca. 2002.  View the full PDF here.

I was rather impressed with Shadybrook upon my first visit.  Most small town enclosed shopping malls are of the garden variety dumbbell layout, a straight line main corridor with a single anchor at each end.  But Shadybrook was a full cross shape in the tradition of places like Hickory Hollow Mall, albeit as though someone had put it in the dryer.


1- The mall entrance next to Sears.  (Source)  2- JCPenney exterior.  (Source)  3- The former JCPenney comes down.  (Source)  4- Demolition work at Columbia Mall.  (Source)

The interior was very neutral, also in the tradition of small town enclosed centers.  There was a Sears and JCPenney anchoring each end of the main corridor while Goody’s home was at the far end of the cross concourse.  In the middle was a small center court boasting a diminutive water feature.

Shadybrook Mall Mallmanac ca. 2010.  View the full PDF here.

I really loved visiting the tiny complex on James Campbell Boulevard and would even stop by occasionally on trips from Huntsville to Nashville even after my uncle had departed for greener and less cult-y pastures in South Carolina.  It was small, simple and inviting.


1- The Peebles mall entrance.  2- The Sears entryway to the mall.  3- Christmas time at Shadybrook Mall.  4- Columbia Mall in its later, more vacant days.  (Source for all)

Shadybrook Mall opened its doors in 1981 as a nearly 300,000 square foot enclosed retail facility hosting three anchors.  The arrival of the Saturn plant brought more national names to the mall, but after a while it was feeling the effects of CoolSprings Galleria’s presence in nearby Franklin with more pain coming from the eventual discontinuation of the Saturn line.




Shadybrook Mall proposal ca. 2023.  View the full PDF here.

By the late 2010s, nearly all tenants had departed besides JCPenney, several military recruitment offices, a few stores and an outpatient center.  Shadybrook Mall, which had been redubbed the bland moniker Columbia Mall a few years previously, was dead.


Columbia Mall was demalled in the early 2020s while the Maury Regional Medical Center moved their oncology department into some of the existing square footage. And while Columbia, being in the shadow of booming Nashville, is experiencing accelerated growth of their own, it’s unfortunate that Shadybrook Mall won’t be a part of it.


27 December 2014

Foothills Mall, Maryville, TN

An extant asset

-UPDATE BELOW-
3 November 2024


There’s a lot to love about the Smokey Mountains of Tennessee. The country roads leading up to the eponymous National Park, Dolly Parton and her theme park nestled in good ole Pigeon Forge, and the big, bright college town of Knoxville located right at the foot of the hills. There, in the suburban villa of Maryville, just a short drive past the McGhee-Tyson airport, is the mall named after those foothills.


-UPDATE- Foothills Mall’s original look. (Source for all)

Foothills Mall hosted my one and only visit to Maryville in December of 2000, when I went on an impromptu visit to see a friend who lived in the area. Truth be told, against the gorgeous backdrop of eastern Tennessee, there really wasn’t much to remember about the place.


Foothills Mall Mallmanac, ca. 2000. View the full PDF version here.

It was small, had one of the few mall locations of Goody’s that I had ever seen and not much else. I was just glad that they had mallmanacs available to commemorate the occasion. But everything else was just kind of forgettable.


-UPDATE- 1- The main entrance to Foothills Mall next to TJ Maxx.  2- The AMC Theaters.  3- Belk’s exterior.  4- The former JCPenney façade. (Source for all)

Foothills Mall opened in 1983 and remains the only enclosed shopping mall within suburban Blount County. It debuted with JCPenney, Miller’s, Proffitt’s and Sears; pretty standard for that region of the south. When Miller’s left, Proffitt's moved into their walls and occupied two separate spaces. Before long, Belk took over just one of the Proffitt’s while the other sat empty until Carmike opened a cinema in its place.

-UPDATE- Foothills Mall Mallmanac ca. 2019. View the full PDF version here.

With an addition of Goody’s and TJ Maxx, Foothills seems to be doing fine. I really hope it lasts, as these types of facilities on the extreme outskirts of medium size cities seem to be falling by the wayside. So I hope never to read of a re-formatting along with a renaming involving the words Towne and Centre.



-UPDATE-

-30 November 2024

Foothills Mall Mallmanac ca. 2021. View the full PDF version here.

Although most peers in the small town mall category are failing, Foothills seems to be holding its own.  The Goody’s space was taken over by local outfit Farmer’s Furniture while both Sears and JCPenney made their departures in the 2010s, leaving Belk as the only remaining traditional anchor.



1 to 3- The Foothills Mall interior entrances for JCPenney, Sears, and Belk. (Source for all)  4 to 6- Recent interior shots of Foothills Mall.  (Source for all)

However, both original anchors have been replaced by non-traditional mall tenants BJ’s Wholesale Club in the former pad occupied by JCPenney while Publix makes their new home where Sears once existed.  The tenant mix remains relatively strong with about 40 shops still occupying inline space.




Foothills Mall pamphlet ca. 2024. View the full PDF version here.