lookashiny: (Default)
[personal profile] lookashiny
1. The Saddest Strip Mall That Ever Existed: This doesn't physically exist, there's a Lowe's superstore there now. However, from 2001ish to 2008, when that moved in, this was a decaying, mostly empty strip mall. In the late 90s, there was an Ames Department Store, a Grand Union grocery store, a Fashion Bug, and a Chittenden Bank (a local bank chain now owned by People's United). The bank moved across the parking lot to it's own building, and the Ames and Grand Union closed within a year of each other. For about seven years, then, all there was was the Fashion Bug. They were lucky if they got two or three people in the parking lot at once. I went in there with my mom to buy something once, it wasn't that great.

2. Champlain Mill: This one still physically exists, and I think it's trying to be a commercial space again, but apart from the new Waterworks restaurant, all the places that used to be there are gone. It's a building by the Winooski River that's mostly offices, but before they put a huge roundabout in downtown Winooski, there were a couple of floors of stores in it, too. There was the official store for the minor league baseball team (then the Vermont Expos), a sock store, and a stationary store (called the Paper Peddler), among others. The one I went to most was the Book Rack and Children's Pages, an independent bookstore that moved to Essex after the shops closed, before closing in 2008 or so. Brian Jacques, the author of the Redwall books did a reading and signing there that I went to, and got my copy of Legend of Luke signed.

3. Burlington Square Mall/Burlington City Center: This place only recently ceased to physically exist and is supposedly under redevelopment, though that's taking a while. When I went down to Church Street in Burlington, I'd spend at least some of the time here. It was a small mall, with a Filene's/Macy's at one end and the entrance to Church Street at the other. There were two restaurants as a "food court", a Chinese restaurant and a pizza place. The first Hot Topic I ever went to was there, as well as a Walden Books before that chain went out of business. There was an fye store, PacSun, a Spencer's, a Payless shoes, and I think there was a Claire's there, too, though that may have been at the University Mall. There was also a place called Tradewinds, that sold imported crafts and home goods. There were also a few other stores I don't remember.

Date: 2019-01-23 07:01 pm (UTC)
thewayne: (Default)
From: [personal profile] thewayne
I live in an actual village in southern New Mexico, the closest "city" of 30,000ish, Alamogordo, (25 minutes away) has one alleged mall what has a JC Penney on one end and had a KMart on the other. The latter closed last year? Year before? and has since been subdivided into a Harbor Freight and a Melrose Place with plenty of space left for other things yet.

The mall is pretty run down with LOTS of vacant space. It was sold to some company that bought the mall in Gallup (NW corner of the state) and renovated it and got it up to 100% occupancy, so maybe there's hope for us.

Alamogordo, when I moved here, had two grocery stores: Walmart super center and Lowe's (local/regional chain). When Walmart opened a small store, there were 5 grocers. Then Walmart opened the super center and all of them died except the Lowe's, until about 3 years ago when Albertson's came back to town and finally gave us an alternative, whereupon Walmart opened a Neighborhood store.

Retail is a really weird thing. We lost our small Sears store, our call center, the KMart, they tried to build a Starbucks but after the building was completed the foundation cracked and it turned out they build it over the property line of the Ford dealership next door. We did get a Hobby Lobby, that brought a few jobs back along with the Harbor Freight. Now we've got a manufacturer coming in that makes truck ramps, so that'll be 3 dozen jobs or so, but they're not going to pay that great. It might form a hub though, so that might help the area.

But no book stores. We had one, Hastings, the entire chain died and I was hoping for an FYE as they have an area presence, but no joy. We have to drive 90-120 minutes for a book store.

Date: 2019-01-26 07:35 pm (UTC)
sulien: Made from a photo I took of Big Lagoon in Humboldt, California, many years ago. DO NOT TAKE. (Default)
From: [personal profile] sulien
The few strip malls we have out here on the Washington coast seem to be doing well. Our actual mall, on the other hand, is nearly empty. It still has the movieplex and food court, but the major chains are long gone and they can barely keep small local businesses there because of the hours of operation requirement. The mall now gets so little traffic that the military recruiting offices have moved elsewhere.

Date: 2019-01-26 10:32 pm (UTC)
softedisworl: The letters d.i.s. in black text against a red background, except the lowercase "d" is an upside down interrogation mark and the "i" is an exclamation point. (Default)
From: [personal profile] softedisworl
That strip mall certainly sounds like... something.

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