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UER Forum > UE Photography > The Decline of Shopping Malls (Viewed 2060 times)
seicer 


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The Decline of Shopping Malls
< on 1/21/2015 12:14 AM >
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The Decline of Shopping Malls

The American retail landscape is changing. The love affair with the enclosed shopping center peaked about a decade ago and has been waning as consumers seek out revitalized urban centers and mixed-use retail, office and residential developments.
Between 1956 and 2005, approximately 1,500 indoor malls were constructed. Aided in part thanks to the Interstate Highway Act that allowed for the development of 54,000 miles of interstate highways, residents began moving from rural settlements and dense, urban cities to suburban tracts. Whereas shopping was once done in downtowns and neighborhood business districts, roomy shopping centers took their place. Customers could now drive their automobiles to a sea of asphalt and fit their vehicles within generously-sized parking spaces, and then spend their time within an artificial and heated concourse.

Few traditional malls have been constructed in the 21st century, though. The rise of the Internet shopping have been partly to blame, as the convenience of one-click ordering made it easier to acquire hard-to-acquire items, but a physical shift also occurred. Suburban mixed-use developments that incorporated retail, office and residential components became favored, such as Easton Town Center in Columbus, Ohio or Crocker Park in west Cleveland. To an extent, urban projects, such as Pullman Square in Huntington, West Virginia, have siphoned some of the glitz and attention away from traditional malls. There is also direct competition with newer malls that have caused older facilities to languish and be forgotten, too.



Randall Park Mall is one of those malls. When it was completed during the mall boom of the 1970’s, it boasted its motto, “Much More Than Everything.” It boasted five anchors and more than 100 inline stores, and was surrounded physically with other department stores, restaurants and hotels. Randall Park, a rural settlement turned suburban powerhouse, even put an image of a shopping bag into its municipal seal.

But newer developments in newer suburbs began to siphon away business. One by one, retailers left and ownership changed until the mall closed in March 2009. After being in a state of abandonment, demolition began in December 2014. It is to be replaced with an industrial park, arguably more sustainable and tax-producing than a mall, but only time will tell if it will be a success.




Higbee's/Dillard's






Sears wing








JCPenny wing












Dillard's wing




Horne’s/Burlington Coat Factory & LaSalle Furniture wing




General Cinema 3-screen movie theater




Magic Johnson Theaters





Even my hometown was not spared. When Cedar Knoll Galleria opened in 1989 on the outskirts of Ashland, Kentucky, it’s developers boasted that it would become a powerful regional shopping destination. It was a risk that was not well received: Ashland Town Center opened shortly before near downtown.

Cedar Knoll Galleria, never boasting an occupancy above 69%, featured Sears, Elder-Beerman, K-Mart and Phar-Mor as its anchors, but in 2002, Phar-Mor closed all of their stores in the southern United States, including the Cedar Knoll location. K-Mart also pulled out later in the year and was replaced by Artrip’s Market and a flea market in late 2004. Inline stores began leaving and in 2014, Sears left. Elder-Beerman is the only major tenant remaining, other than a movie theater that relocated in the former Phar-Mor.


Elder-Beerman


Former Sears


Food Court entrance








Former K-Mart


Former Sears





There is no redevelopment proposal for Cedar Knoll, though. It’s languishing with a scattering of offices inside, some moribund retailers and some eateries – and while it’s not completely devoid of activity, it will never be fully appreciated at what it was once destined for. Far better uses of the building and land could surely be found.

The American retail landscape is changing, and thankfully it is no longer favoring just enclosed shopping malls.



[last edit 1/21/2015 12:15 AM by seicer - edited 1 times]

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DSomms 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 1 on 1/21/2015 12:18 AM >
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Great work!




inviolate_light 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 2 on 1/21/2015 12:35 AM >
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that last mall is the saddest. It's like it needs to be put out of its misery.




General Zod 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 3 on 1/21/2015 12:50 AM >
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This post contains epic photos of merit.




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Ground State 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 4 on 1/21/2015 2:35 AM >
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I was half hoping to see Tom Savini and the rest of the motorcycle gang come rolling through looting the stores!

Awesome work!.... most of these are nice and crystal clear. #7 looks like some kind of partly-cleaned up Santa-suicide off the 2nd floor. The decay in the first set is total eye-candy with a bit of a tug on the childhood heart strings - it is one thing to see the whole mall falling apart and forgotten, but quite another to see remnants of the Santa greeting area in the middle of mall. As you say, the mall landscape truly is indeed changing.




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Speed 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 5 on 1/21/2015 2:38 AM >
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now this is commencing!




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randomesquephoto 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 6 on 1/21/2015 7:55 AM >
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Taking after your boy seph?




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cdevon 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 7 on 1/21/2015 9:01 AM >
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great set! (i commenced like 4 times)




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Helix 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 8 on 1/22/2015 3:49 AM >
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There is a mall that my family used to take me to all the time as a child and in my teens. The only two main retailers keeping the place afloat is Macy's and Dillards and I'm pretty sure Macy's is fixing to pull up stakes and move. I've been watching and waiting for it for a year now. I'd like to go in and move about freely and shoot a place that I spent a lot of my younger life wasting money and loitering about. You did get some good shots though, thumbs up.




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ForgottenRails 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 9 on 1/22/2015 4:04 AM >
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Amazing photos. Don't play too much 'Left for dead' before going in there though haha.




CramSpazer 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 10 on 1/22/2015 4:54 AM >
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The first mall looks almost identical to the mall in GTA Vice City. There's a mall in Buffalo NY that somehow stays open despite being devoid of people 90% of the time, it's a creepy place.




terapr0 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 11 on 1/22/2015 5:02 AM >
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Great set of images!! Too many good ones to start picking favorites.




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Sceptic 


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Re: The Decline of Shopping Malls
< Reply # 12 on 1/22/2015 3:01 PM >
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Nice Set! That shot of the theatre has to be my favorite!




"Instinctive forces influence the activity of consciousness. Whether that influence is for better or for worse depends upon the actual contents of the unconscious."
UER Forum > UE Photography > The Decline of Shopping Malls (Viewed 2060 times)


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