Macon Mall

Macon Mall

Macon Mall entrance facing Mercer University Drive.
Location Macon, Georgia, United States
Opening date 1975
Management Hull Storey Gibson Companies, LLC
Owner Hull Storey Gibson Companies, LLC
No. of stores and services 44
No. of anchor tenants 3
Total retail floor area 1,080,000 sq ft (100,000 m2).[1]
No. of floors 2
Website www.maconmall.com

Macon Mall is a two level, 1.1 million square foot shopping mall located in Macon, Georgia. The mall features Macy's, Burlington, and JCPenney as its anchor stores, as well as a food court. It has a vacancy rate of over 70% and rising.

History

The mall opened in 1975 as a 1.08 million square foot shopping mall anchored by Davison's, Belk, JCPenney, and Sears. A Woolworth was added later which went bankrupt and today sits as the upstairs food court. The opening of Macon Mall led to the demise of Macon and Georgia's first enclosed mall, Westgate Mall down the street. At opening date the mall was filled with hundreds of light bulbs in a disco-style theme. This appearance quickly became dated and was expensive to maintain, leading to the mall's first renovation in 1983. The food court was added in 1986 and Davison's changed over to Macy's, when Macy's decided to rename all of their stores at the time under the same name.

1997 renovation and expansion

For fourteen years Macon Mall was one of the largest malls in the state of Georgia encompassing 1,448,200-square-foot (134,540 m2). The mall underwent a huge renovation and expansion in 1997 that nearly doubled the size of the mall and added Dillard's and Parisian as anchors. This made the mall more upscale and added over forty new stores in a wing on the other side of JCPenney. This expansion made Macon mall the largest mall in the state of Georgia for two years until Mall of Georgia opened in 1999 in Gwinnett County. Two parking garages were constructed on the new wing to handle the increase in business and decrease in parking. An extra level was also added to the food court that brought in Atlanta Bread Company, Sbarro, and Time Out Arcade. Macy's changed over to Rich's in 1998, several years after Macy's itself merged with Rich's parent company Federated Department Stores. In the years following the expansion, Macon Mall ran a near monopoly on regional retail. A new power center named Eisenhower Crossing opened down the street in 2001 and took the Old Navy from the mall. Federated integrated Macy's into Rich's as Rich's-Macy's in 2003, and in 2005 announced they were eliminating all of their regional names in favor of Macy's in 2005. This resulted in Rich's at Macon Mall changing back to Macy's. Belk also dropped the "Matthews" name from their store and Steve & Barry's opened a large store on the upper level of the Sears wing in 2005.

Late 2000s decline

Parisian was bought by Belk in for $285 million and the Parisian was closed in 2007. The mall entered foreclosure in 2008, and put under the operation of Jones Lang LaSalle.[2] In 2008, The Shoppes at River Crossing, a new lifestyle center, opened in North Bibb County and took Dillard's from Macon Mall. Dillard's stated they could better serve the market with one store, but their departure was speculate to be because of the mall's debt issues. With Dillard's gone, this leaves the two anchor stores added to the mall in 1997 vacant, and the mall performance began to deteriorate rapidly. This in turn created a ripple effect and many tenants began to depart the mall in 2009, such as Abercrombie & Fitch, Ann Taylor Loft, Eddie Bauer, Hollister Co., The Gap, Charlotte Russe, New York & Company, f.y.e., The Limited, Lane Bryant, Wolf Camera, LensCrafters, Starbucks, and Ruby Tuesday. Some of these stores moved to The Shoppes at River Crossing, many left the Macon area entirely, and some closed due to corporate bankruptcies: Steve & Barry's, B. Dalton, Linens N Things, and KB Toys. The Movie Tavern that was supposed to open in spring 2009, in the former Parisian building, never did mainly due to the mall's financial issues. The upper level of the food court has been completely abandoned. This exodus of retailers is a direct result of Dillard's vacancy, new competition, poor location, and the weakened economy. In 2009, Macon Mall introduced Art Space. This is the second art space concept in a mall in the U.S. The first is Crestwood Court outside of St. Louis.

The Hull Storey Gibson Era: Renovation and demolition

The mall continued to leak in-line tenants in 2010 including Express, Yankee Candle, Hot Topic, Chick-Fil-A, and Subway. In September 2010, the mall was acquired by Hull Storey Gibson of Augusta, Georgia. They planned to demolish the east wing of the mall beginning with the vacant Parisian building. The original and remaining portion of the mall, which has fared better in recent years, was renovated. The art space tenants in the 1997 addition were asked to vacate, while the remaining inline tenants were asked to move to the west wing. While many did (Rue 21, Finish Line, Spencer's) just to name a few, there were some who left the mall including American Eagle Outfitters, Victoria's Secret, and Sunglass Hut. Demolition began on August 15, 2011. Once demolition was complete, North Point Mall in Alpharetta outside Atlanta relinquieshed Macon Mall as fourth largest mall in Georgia. Macon Mall also signed off with a new restaurant called Smok’n Pig which is the largest tenant to sign with the mall. This restaurant is 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2) and takes up at least 7 stores including the former Baskin-Robbins which is located on the Sears wing of the mall which has the most vacancies. The Renovation was revealed on November 18 and 19 in a two-day celebration. Notable changes included the whole mall being carpeted, new skylights and ceilings, new restrooms, removal of the carousel, and the moving of staircases. They did not demolish the former Dillard's building. Demolition was completed by the end of 2011.[3] On December 29, 2011, Sears announced that they would close the store at the Macon Mall due to a decline in sales at both Kmart and Sears stores nationwide. [4] Sears' last day was Sunday, April 29, 2012. Belk closed its doors on Saturday, September 15, 2012. Meanwhile, vacancies are steadily increasing with stores like The Children's Place, Radio Shack, Kirkland's, Aéropostale, and Justice leaving the mall. [5] Despite these closures, two stores opened in 2012: B. Turner's and Dry Falls Outfitters.[6]

Macy's Interior Entrance of the Macon Mall in Macon GA

Burlington Coat Factory confirmed that it would move into the upper level of the former Sears in 2015.[7] In October 2015, Burlington Coat Factory opened in the top level of the former Sears as Burlington. [8]

Anchors

Former anchors

References

  1. "Mall Properties: Macon Mall". Hull Storey Gibson Companies, LLC. Retrieved 2011-01-27.
  2. "Macon Mall to Be Up for Sale Next Month". Istockanalyst.com. 2008-10-12. Retrieved 2012-03-21.
  3. New Macon Mall owner plans remodel, demolition Archived October 18, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  4. "Sears at Macon Mall to Close". 13wmaz.com. 2011-12-29. Retrieved 2012-03-21.
  5. Goodridge, Harold. "Belk closing its Macon Mall store - Breaking News". Macon.com. Retrieved 2012-03-21.
  6. http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/morning_call/2012/07/macon-mall-to-get-two-new-stores.html
  7. http://www.macon.com/2015/02/26/3608145_burlington-to-move-from-westgate.html?rh=1
  8. Trawick, Ashley (2015-09-23). "Burlington Opens at the Macon Mall". 13WMAZ. Retrieved 2015-10-06.

External links

Coordinates: 32°49′01″N 83°41′40″W / 32.81692°N 83.69432°W / 32.81692; -83.69432

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