tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-86941321913690574342024-02-07T16:39:37.490-08:00Pseudo3D's Retail RelatedPseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-12296864676115620822013-01-08T10:41:00.001-08:002013-02-04T07:36:44.717-08:00Squeezing the Tomatoes<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVG19X0w3RCiGZtpnF9prj0gcwH6hniq01j38b18UY_ERN27t94hddFGWMCSpCsFucksFQUshon9ValR9cvVmEmNC8HOtQac7IABpCFAD3cgxAqeu4Hi5sP7yMk2fA6AN6RIiCTAQMjll_/s1600/Scan+40.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="400" width="285" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVG19X0w3RCiGZtpnF9prj0gcwH6hniq01j38b18UY_ERN27t94hddFGWMCSpCsFucksFQUshon9ValR9cvVmEmNC8HOtQac7IABpCFAD3cgxAqeu4Hi5sP7yMk2fA6AN6RIiCTAQMjll_/s400/Scan+40.jpg" /></a></div>
The reason this is a bit tragic--and not because of Meijer per se, is that Walmart today DOESN'T go for "good food as the draw" as much. The meat is packaged elsewhere and packed with chemicals, and the bakery is a joke: while a real supermarket makes in-scratch dough, Walmart gets theirs from Canada. The good news is that while Super Kmart is basically dead in the water, Meijer is thriving, and other grocery stores (including H-E-B, even Kroger) are picking up on adding general merchandise.
Microfilm courtesy Blinn CollegePseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-11296439248045332722012-08-25T14:36:00.002-07:002012-11-27T09:52:04.208-08:00Auchan and its subtenantsFrom Houston Post:<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzkuZBPXedI3A4fuv4LMk94MfgwRLoDycbkRbHlWvO6X0aYzO_cDsQR88ym9cJELFwIm7D_yECeN0_o4FixC8Ox9P_oRrzHgLHSWVNLEyIZq6dSMgjG7-BX8t5tc1USUyTZAXx5WzG-07N/s1600/scan0012.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 383px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzkuZBPXedI3A4fuv4LMk94MfgwRLoDycbkRbHlWvO6X0aYzO_cDsQR88ym9cJELFwIm7D_yECeN0_o4FixC8Ox9P_oRrzHgLHSWVNLEyIZq6dSMgjG7-BX8t5tc1USUyTZAXx5WzG-07N/s400/scan0012.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5780977938422753890" /></a><br />For what's it worth, China Belle must have been a full-service restaurant, as Googling the name has it has at the Auchan address, and there's no other references to it.
Also, they left out the travel agency (one of the 14)Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-52281370804449985732012-08-15T08:35:00.000-07:002012-08-15T08:36:29.205-07:00Gateway MallHooker plans 4-6 anchors for Gateway Mall project. (LJ Hooker Developments).<br />Daily News Record 18.n90 (May 10, 1988): p.p15(1). (421 words) <br />Show details<br /><br />Full Text :COPYRIGHT 1988 Fairchild Publications, Inc.<br />Hooker Plans 4-6 Anchors For Gateway Mall Project ATLANTA -- LJ Hooker Developments detailed plans for its Gateway Fashion Mall, a 1.2-million-square-foot shopping center that is part of the second phase of the Atlanta-based company's midtown Atlanta mixed-use project.<br /><br />Scheduled to open in fall 1990, Gateway Fashion Mall will have at least four major anchor stores or as many as six, according to Boyd Simpson, president of LJ Hooker Developments. The three-level mall will also have abouit 150 smaller shops, a food court, restaurants, a cinema, and a 10,000-square-foot legitimate theater that will fit in with the midtown area's focus on the arts.<br /><br />While Hooker did not announce which stores will anchor the mall, Simpson said that several stores had expressed an interest in anchor positions -- "more than we have space for," he noted. Possible candidates would be retailers owned by the LJ Hooker Retail Group. These are Bonwit Teller, B. Altman's, Sakowitz, and Parisian. The Hooker Retail Group, which also owns Merksamer Jewelers, was formed in the fall of 1987.<br /><br />"It's probable that some of these retailers will be Gateway anchors," Simpson said. He added that he expects a decision to be made on the anchor mix before construction begins in late summer. He said that formal announcements regarding the anchor stores would be made "with the respective retailers once the anchor mix is fully resolved."<br /><br />He said, too, that he expects no difficulty in leasing the 425,000 square feet of small store space. "Atlanta is attractive to both the smaller regional and the larger national retail chains becuase it's the 10th-largest market in the nation and they want to be here. Midtown's appeal is its new 'heart' and status."<br /><br />The shopping mall will lie between two high-rise ofice buildings, both of which will have their own parking decks. One is a 49-floor, 1.2-million-square-foot tower and the other is a 21-floor, 500,000-square-foot building. The total complex will blend office, residential, retail and hotel space on 19-acre site in the midtown area.<br /><br />Thompson Venulett Stainback & Associates, an Atlanta-based architectural firm, created the preliminary conceptual design for the mall. Simpson called the design "a spectacular open and airy galleria with elegant finishes." The interior detailing will include sculptured columns and railings, pendant chandeliers, pools and a water cascade.<br /><br />LJ Hooker Developments began assembling parcels of land for the Gateway project in the early 1980s before the midtown building boom began, the company said. Simpson said that Gateway Center has been a favored project of Hooker Corp.'s executive chairman, George Herscu.Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-23640519515696224632012-06-17T12:28:00.003-07:002012-06-17T12:34:17.434-07:00A rather Grand mall<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEisgJAwcaWm2LKzv8wnHSTvgFyQ69RgCfwROrtJYFDFhIWNlbPgv3DwIrYCjIS7j9reA64-rdPl_GzbFYWKNdqSlyCFd4iSj_HmPh1bq9RVWaX95vVAGvksReY4eD9jdikIMLzjOou4Wby5/s1600/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.38.26+AM.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 166px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEisgJAwcaWm2LKzv8wnHSTvgFyQ69RgCfwROrtJYFDFhIWNlbPgv3DwIrYCjIS7j9reA64-rdPl_GzbFYWKNdqSlyCFd4iSj_HmPh1bq9RVWaX95vVAGvksReY4eD9jdikIMLzjOou4Wby5/s400/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.38.26+AM.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5755090320815817970" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhBiEQRc92qD1H4lq7MwzPl7Aom5mSUw572M5bxBy3HcHiqw9GJfcpybAUTO5NlaxpCNaTnHrJhCKELY4fvFBwZgpgV8M6f1AHhgjAMVt_IbGTziWm54EYAtku-Ldn5FyTelLkq6kmay12U/s1600/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.38.44+AM.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 150px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhBiEQRc92qD1H4lq7MwzPl7Aom5mSUw572M5bxBy3HcHiqw9GJfcpybAUTO5NlaxpCNaTnHrJhCKELY4fvFBwZgpgV8M6f1AHhgjAMVt_IbGTziWm54EYAtku-Ldn5FyTelLkq6kmay12U/s400/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.38.44+AM.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5755090317307602754" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimNeZ1CgRHsfOXSiVyIVtXEmEhDZMfENCOXiXIcZsmL3gjhQeovj8ck5j2ecxW2kXgxe39ddDpcJQnxb_myq1fY-KXlfEZWTKg2EVgGWijn5spFj6ZZkHROmTgWLQrbE_4VFfSwmWlrDB3/s1600/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.38.58+AM.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 147px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimNeZ1CgRHsfOXSiVyIVtXEmEhDZMfENCOXiXIcZsmL3gjhQeovj8ck5j2ecxW2kXgxe39ddDpcJQnxb_myq1fY-KXlfEZWTKg2EVgGWijn5spFj6ZZkHROmTgWLQrbE_4VFfSwmWlrDB3/s400/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.38.58+AM.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5755090306491564866" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxnR-7Uv8UQMflGnopdZupwF8rIrfRY1yFX6A4FQIHoKCKPDzC27eOXryoZ9Y4i6Wp75EX6fl3P_ebmOgs2XEr_hIm_MJSwFvVstzPYtaueIbXaW1kb-VN5RyPVgjoBMEmrydt7FFI5MBF/s1600/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.39.16+AM.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 165px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxnR-7Uv8UQMflGnopdZupwF8rIrfRY1yFX6A4FQIHoKCKPDzC27eOXryoZ9Y4i6Wp75EX6fl3P_ebmOgs2XEr_hIm_MJSwFvVstzPYtaueIbXaW1kb-VN5RyPVgjoBMEmrydt7FFI5MBF/s400/Screen+shot+2012-06-15+at+6.39.16+AM.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5755090303466161970" /></a><br /><br />These were taken from a Google News Archive newspaper from 1982, showing the grand opening of Grand Avenue Mall. It was an innovative center, connecting two historic department stores, including Gimbels (yes, the first Gimbels was in Milwaukee, not New York City). While the mall was built in 1982, most of the buildings came from a much earlier time, including the Plankinton Arcade. A lot of the stores were unique, local, upscale-leaning stores as part of the "festival marketplace" theme Rouse loved so much. Sadly, due to mismanagement over the years, nearly every store has moved on, and the mall is hardly what it was in the glory days.Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-76134682076606582722012-06-09T13:52:00.002-07:002012-06-09T13:54:53.314-07:00Arlington, Texas-Area Malls Aim to Win over Shoppers' Palates<i>Dunno about you, but buying roasted corn at a mall is delicious, and healthy, relatively.</i><br /><br />Title:Arlington, Texas-Area Malls Aim to Win over Shoppers' Palates<br />Authors:Shirley Jinkins<br />Source:Fort Worth Star-Telegram (TX); 11/24/2002<br /><br /><br />Arlington, Texas-Area Malls Aim to Win over Shoppers' Palates<br />Nov. 24--ARLINGTON -- It's 4:45 p.m. on a Saturday, sometime between Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve. You are at a mall with three children under 10, your pregnant sister and 7,000 other Arlington residents.<br />All of you are hungry.<br />Believe it or not, this is just the sort of scenario for which mall managers plan, negotiate and strategize, but they must also plan for the midsummer weekday lunch hour.<br />Hometown Star staff members visited Arlington malls for lunch recently and found a wide range of food choices and atmospheres.<br />Here is what we found: The Parks at Arlington mall has just opened a huge new addition, which enlarged the existing second-level food court.<br />Six Flags Mall is beginning a yearlong expansion project on its food court.<br />Festival International Bazaar is promoting diversity in its food offerings as well as its shops.<br />"What we did, we took a step back and said, `Who is our customer?' " said April Irwin, marketing director for Six Flags Mall at 2911 E. Division St. The 30-year-old mall is renovating its food service areas and will be opening three new restaurants by Dec. 1.<br />The French Market will serve soups, salads, pastries and specialty coffees. Chicago's Taste & More will offer Chicago-style hot dogs with all the trimmings. Cakes & Pies, a pastry shop, will open in a food-court space being vacated by the Brass Bean.<br />Our visit to Six Flags Mall included a stop at a proven favorite, Italia Express, near the movie theatre. Their lunch special of a slice of pizza and a drink for $2.75 was both filling and frugal, and the pizza is cheesy and fragrant. The calzones for $3.75 were huge.<br />Irwin said mall food-court plans must consider three elements: seating, uniqueness of food vendors and nearby activities.<br />Seating areas should be well-lighted, accessible and plentiful, Irwin said, and food courts should be conveniently located near mall exits.<br />Small, child-friendly activities, such as arcades, should be near the court so slower-eating adults can finish meals while keeping an eye on their children.<br />"We don't want to duplicate the same food places over and over," Irwin said. "We think about what people ask for and versatility."<br />The French Market is attractive, Irwin said, because of its huge and varied menu. Chicago's Taste & More is a good choice because virtually everyone likes hot dogs.<br />"Kids can have plain ones, and adults can have a really great hot dog with all the trimmings," Irwin said.<br />The mall's free-standing restaurants, including Subway Sandwiches and El Chico's, attract sit-down diners, especially those who plan to attend a movie at the mall theater, Irwin said.<br />"We're in an industrial district, and there are not a lot of choices around us," Irwin said of the mall's regular lunch crowd of employees of nearby companies. "We're a logical destination, and that's why we're expanding."<br />Rohn Korman, manager at Festival International Bazaar at 2900 E. Pioneer Parkway, said shoppers at his east Arlington location are looking for variety.<br />"Everyone seems to enjoy the fact that we don't have a traditional food court," he said. The mall itself is nontraditional and multicultural, with a mix of shop spaces and a central bazaar-style shopping area with vendors' stalls.<br />The centerpiece of the mall's food offerings is a buffet adjacent to a couple of food-court spaces and a huge area of tables and chairs.<br />"We have a great Mexican buffet," Korman said, and indeed, the El Mexico de Mis Sabores takes up a full row of former food-court spaces, turning a corner and continuing down another row.<br />The $6.75 buffet is served from noon to closing Wednesdays through Sundays, Korman said.<br />"There are usually about seven different meats, rice and beans; they usually have a salad and a couple of desserts," Korman said. "And they have five different traditional Mexican punches made of flower petals."<br />Other food-court vendors include Burger King and the Round Rock Cafe, which serves Greek-style gyro ( pronounced "hero") sandwiches and chicken specialties.<br />The `Hometown Star' staff members' lunch consisted of tasty gyro sandwiches and a Philly cheese steak sub from Round Rock Cafe. The meats were tender and flavorful, cooked on the spot instead of rewarmed, and the breads were fresh and soft.<br />However, the Mexican buffet wasn't operational yet, although it was 1 p.m. on a Wednesday. Only hand-lettered signs marked off its territory in the food court.<br />Aesthetics count in mall cuisine, too.<br />The Parks at Arlington, 3811 S. Cooper St., made improvements to the second-floor food court along with the addition of a huge new wing to the mall.<br />There are still 13 food-court vendors, said Monica Vermea of The Parks' marketing department, but diners may think they're in a completely new space.<br />"The food court itself is newly painted, with new tables and chairs, and we added two new sections by the carousel," Vermea said.<br />Almost 500 new seats were added to the court, bringing available seating to 950.<br />"Basically, we doubled in size," Vermea said.<br />New to food-court shoppers this Christmas season at The Parks are Steak Escape, Sonic, Roman Delight pizza and pasta and Ninfa's Express ("a take-out version of our full-size Ninfa's," Vermea said.). A new Starbuck's, Pretzelmaker/TCBY and Haagen-Dazs have opened on the second floor beyond the food court.<br />Most of the action is at the back of the food court, near two new spectacular attractions: a full-size indoor carousel and a National Hockey League-size ice rink. That's where the `Hometown Star' crew sat for our review, picking out our favorite animals on the carousel (the long-eared rabbit and the yellow cat with a fish in its mouth were our top choices).<br />Foodwise it's hard to beat our choice of the Cajun Cafe's wonderful bourbon chicken with rice, steamed vegetables and an egg roll for under $5, although our colleagues enjoyed their fajitas and a taco salad from Ninfa's Express.<br />The Parks can't be beaten for people-watching, particularly if you're by the carousel or ice rink. The new food-court furniture, with cheery laminated wildflower photography on the tabletops, has more of a restaurant feel than the plastic stuff before.<br />Standing choices Malls must also plan for food service in addition to sit-down restaurants and food-court areas.<br />"Shoppers look for unusual things like impulse purchases," Irwin said of Six Flags Mall's snack spots such as the new Dippin Dots, joining Pretzels Etc.<br />Korman said Festival mall's cart vendors are very popular with shoppers. The carts are rolled throughout the mall during the day.<br />"Our fresh fruit vendor cuts up the fruit right in front of you and serves it to you," Korman said. The fruit, mostly regionally grown produce, comes from a large farmer's market in the west end of the mall where fruit and vegetables can be bought in bulk.<br />Roasted ears of corn are also sold from carts, and a pastry cart purveys sweets to shoppers.<br />"I try to pick and choose the food vendors," Korman said, adding that shoppers seem to enjoy both the mobile food and the sit-down dinners.<br />"Sometimes there's a real rush on the buffet, then other times it's a rush on the roasted corn or the pastry carts," Korman said. "It's sometimes unpredictable."Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-31522946601551246892012-03-23T15:55:00.003-07:002012-03-23T15:59:56.849-07:00Kmart and Venture in HoustonKmart to buy all but 3 Houston Venture stores/900 employees will be laid off<br />RALPH BIVINS Staff<br />FRI 07/04/1997 HOUSTON CHRONICLE, Section Business, Page 1, 3 STAR Edition<br /><br />Kmart Corp. is acquiring 20 Venture Stores, including most of those in Houston, where competition is fierce among discounters.<br />Ten Houston Venture stores will be sold, leaving three in operation, the company announced Thursday. After a going-out-business sale, Venture will lay off about 900 Houston employees.<br />Kmart will take possession of the stores by Sept. 15 and will renovate them and reopen them in time for the Christmas season.<br />Analysts have been expecting some casualties in the discount retail war, where Target, Kmart and Wal-Mart are dominant.<br />Venture, which entered the Houston market about five years ago, operates in some excellent, high-visibility locations that Kmart wanted to buy, said Ed Wulfe of the Wulfe & Co. realty firm. "It gives Kmart a very strong position in this market."<br />Kmart has 15 local stores now. The number will grow to 25 with the Venture acquisition.<br />A clearance sale will begin in a week or 10 days at the Venture stores that are closing, said Venture spokesman Cliff Campeau.<br />"It will be a savings from anywhere from 15, 50, 60 or 70 percent. The goal is to move the merchandise," Campeau said.<br />The three Venture stores that will remain open are those at 6802 Spencer Highway in Pasadena, 4553 Garth Road in Baytown and 7600 Westheimer near Voss.<br />Those three stores were probably rejected by Kmart because they are close to existing Kmarts, said Bob Sellingsloh of Wulfe & Co., which assisted Venture in locating sites in Houston.<br />The Venture stores that will be purchased by Kmart are located near West Oaks Mall, in the Clear Lake area, near Willowbrook Mall, in Meyerland Plaza, on the Northwest Freeway, on FM 1960, in Texas City, in Sugar Land, at 11542 Gulf Freeway and at 8300 W. Sam Houston.<br />"These stores fit well with Kmart's existing locations in key metropolitan areas and will add significantly to our market penetration in the Dallas and Houston markets," said Larry Kellar, vice president of real estate for Kmart, which has 2,122 stores.<br />The Venture stores being sold were selected because they weren't profitable, a Venture spokesman said.<br />The other stores being sold to Troy, Mich.-based Kmart include five in Dallas, two in Indianapolis, and one each in Tulsa, Okla., Des Moines, Iowa, and Waterloo, Iowa.<br /><br /><i><a href="http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl/1997_1422462/kmart-to-buy-all-but-3-houston-venture-stores-900.html">Continue reading the original article</a></i><br /><br />I think this article is interesting, because in addition to basically explaining where all the Venture stores were (I thought the Sugar Land one survived?), it does lay inroads to how Kmart would pull out of Houston about six years after this article was written, with the old Kmarts now into other uses: converted into smaller spaces, second-rate tenants, or demolished entirely.<br /><br />Venture would fare far worse: they declared bankruptcy in 1998 and closed all their stores.Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-25592114004018020302012-01-05T15:09:00.000-08:002012-01-05T15:13:13.793-08:00A Bazaar RenovationThis is a news article from 1999, not too long after Forum 303 Mall (briefly Forum Discount Mall, apparently) became "Festival Marketplace Mall", an interesting flea market-bazaar-mall idea. It didn't last too long due to market oversaturation, and was gone by the end of 2005.<br /><br />Arlington mall goes `bazaar'<br />Dallas Business Journal by Ronni Sayewitz, Staff Writer<br />Date: Sunday, February 21, 1999, 11:00pm CST<br /><br />Related News<br /><br />Ronni Sayewitz<br />Staff Writer<br />ARLINGTON -- It got off to a rocky start. But the owner of Arlington's Festival Marketplace Mall hopes that a new management team, a wider variety of tenants and a million-dollar marketing push will re-establish the long-struggling retail center as a top shopping destination.<br />"We've been going through some growing pains," said Bob Yari, a Los Angeles-based real estate investor and president and owner of the Festival Marketplace. "This is a brand-new concept for the area, and it's going to take a year or two to get it on its feet."<br />Yari says the effort will be easier now that the property's top executives are in place.<br />The Marketplace completed a lengthy search for a general manager last month with the addition of Robert Cesare, longtime general manager of the Six Flags Mall in Arlington. Cesare replaced Bea Nave, who temporarily ran the Marketplace after its founding manager, Willard Hart, was shifted to the operations department.<br />Marcia Minnies, former marketing specialist for the city of North Richland Hills parks and recreation department and NRH20 Family Water Park, rounded out the mall's management team on Feb. 15 as the new director of marketing. She replaced Cindy Thompson, who left the Marketplace to pursue other opportunities.<br />"In hiring Bob we're showing a lot of confidence in him, because this is a very, very tough job," Yari said. "It's not a typical manager position where you come into a predetermined situation."<br />Yari, who owns 50 office and retail developments in Texas, bought the ailing Forum 303 Mall in 1994 for an undisclosed price after it was foreclosed on by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.<br />The 28-year-old shopping center had lost its market position due to the decline of the surrounding area, as well as the arrival of sleek new competitors like The Parks at Arlington. Most of Forum 303's national tenants gradually abandoned the shopping center, except for a handful of stores like Montgomery Ward and Dillard's Clearance Center.<br /><br />Yari first tried to resurrect the nearly 800,000-square-foot property as an outlet mall, and then as a discount outlet center. Later, he became intrigued with a unique bargain hunters' paradise in Pompano Beach, Fla.: the Festival Flea Market Mall.<br />That one-of-a-kind, 400,000-square-foot concept lures over 4 million shoppers a year by merging the festival atmosphere of a bazaar with the more upscale look and product mix of an outlet mall.<br />Last May, Yari introduced the concept to Texas by re-launching Forum 303 as the Festival Marketplace Mall.<br />The struggle to find alternative uses for dying malls is a trend at shopping centers nationwide, as a growing number of traditional tenants opt for the easier access and destination appeal of freestanding locations. The rise of Internet retailing and Main Street shopping areas have also contributed to the decline of malls, said Peter Carlsen, a partner in real estate consulting at Ernst & Young L.L.P. in Dallas.<br /><br />"Regional malls in general have been hit hard in the last three to five years," he said. "The great locations like the Galleria will continue to serve as malls, but we've seen a lot of others retrofitted into other retail concepts, office uses, warehouses or call centers."<br />The Festival Marketplace concept is still evolving, Yari said. So far, he's plunked down $5 million to gut the interior of the building, make visual improvements, enlarge entryways and hire more security staff.<br /><br />Yari also replaced the mall's traditional storefronts and walls with some 500 vendor booths and aisles. He recently purchased the mall's empty Service Merchandise store to make room for a second phase of expansion that could double the number of booths, Cesare said.<br />Today, the once-dreary shopping center lures new patrons with freshly painted walls, a bright red, yellow, blue and green decor and a massive children's play area completed in December.<br />Tourists and locals bargain in true-bazaar style for new, brand-name or handmade items at nearly 250 shops, including jewelry, electronics, apparel, home furnishings, ethnic novelties and toy outlets. There's also a variety of other uses, including a video arcade, a food court, sit-down restaurants, an AMC movie theater and a farmers' market.<br /><br />"It's been a struggle, but things are starting to look up," said Deborah Whittington, who opened an art-and-crafts store at the Marketplace in December. "This is my very first business, and we already have bookings through August."<br />Owners of the Festival Flea Market in Florida acted as consultants for the Arlington project, although they don't have a financial stake in the property, Yari said. But if the Texas property is profitable, Yari said the two companies will use it as a prototype for a jointly launched chain of festival malls nationwide.<br /><br />The mall owners are considering three cities to open their first joint venture within six months -- including Houston, where Yari already owns two enclosed shopping centers.<br /><br />"If you go to the mall today, you know in advance every store it will have," Yari said. "The key to our success will be having a wide variety of tenants that encourages people to come here for things they can't find anywhere else."<br />The Festival Marketplace also fills a need in the market by offering small retailers a place to compete against large national chains, Yari added.<br /><br />"It's a great place for people to get their feet wet for such a little amount of time and money," Cesare said. "You can rent a booth for $100 for a weekend, or get a kiosk on (a main hallway) for $1,000 a month."<br />Even so, analysts say the Marketplace may face a long uphill battle, considering its location in a neighborhood not regarded as a retail destination.<br /><br />"Festival marketplaces have done very well in areas with significant office space, pedestrian traffic and tourist appeal," Carlsen said. "They're going to have to make up for the fact that there's not a big concentration of (those requirements) in the area."Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-48756065031812890842011-12-18T14:57:00.000-08:002011-12-18T15:05:41.707-08:00Forest Fair Mall ad, circa 1989Here is a Forest Fair Mall ad from circa 1989 (thanks, Cincinnati Magazine) that's a bit cut-off, but you can see it clearly. In case you don't know, <a href="http://deadmalls.com/malls/forest_fair_mall.html">it was a complete failure</a> and is still around today, despite numerous re-positionings and a total tenant turnover, trying to become a mixed-use complex.<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj486iINQV9MxvqWWahMJGlrdg16YExeD0Ca4tXP8ykHO_NovqZ6ulGK7gFC_mMrpE23ACvjXYHKZBUae5A5VWrvps9mXg4ReaP2d-PTmq1C_KpeosmZUtYtzOEPfqBI63y2-Suu9vCN75E/s1600/books-1.jpeg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 287px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj486iINQV9MxvqWWahMJGlrdg16YExeD0Ca4tXP8ykHO_NovqZ6ulGK7gFC_mMrpE23ACvjXYHKZBUae5A5VWrvps9mXg4ReaP2d-PTmq1C_KpeosmZUtYtzOEPfqBI63y2-Suu9vCN75E/s400/books-1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5687606727300394498" /></a><br /><br />And as a bonus, an ad for the short-lived B. Altman, which closed soon after the opening of the mall (the rest of the chain would close soon after).<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfgbpZcOo0ey6XyokPsgfPzQBEf_fOGfssxdXEQ4ta6udkpIdmXl3L1fMGVsrPIBkRuCGEQzwaMMgzsLp4KptfP_VuO3fBiqJKq4cimWXFXqw9ESvJOX4Xap_3byh8Hq4Px65Yt2GLlIT-/s1600/books.jpeg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 291px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfgbpZcOo0ey6XyokPsgfPzQBEf_fOGfssxdXEQ4ta6udkpIdmXl3L1fMGVsrPIBkRuCGEQzwaMMgzsLp4KptfP_VuO3fBiqJKq4cimWXFXqw9ESvJOX4Xap_3byh8Hq4Px65Yt2GLlIT-/s400/books.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5687606726671588978" /></a>Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-50287261590269847982011-10-06T09:23:00.000-07:002011-10-06T09:24:42.841-07:00Mayfair Enclosure/Remodel<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEixpVRlSNeETngGYPacYZgLbQXxUhCok-C6IeeNdtyxewZLPOu0-LxmSH9pLR1zK30KfRWzf9p_z4-lqvhB4xJG4gGQpjZy6bo65Phi079UcnaToNDYDJZyULOSVBsCm7USWzhwCrE7u5a8/s1600/mayfairproject.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEixpVRlSNeETngGYPacYZgLbQXxUhCok-C6IeeNdtyxewZLPOu0-LxmSH9pLR1zK30KfRWzf9p_z4-lqvhB4xJG4gGQpjZy6bo65Phi079UcnaToNDYDJZyULOSVBsCm7USWzhwCrE7u5a8/s400/mayfairproject.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5660415723806850242" /></a><br />January 30, 1973 from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel/Google News Archive.<br /><br />Sounds awesome to me!Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-26711378479164434312011-05-30T08:27:00.001-07:002011-05-30T08:27:59.042-07:00Waco's Year in BusinessWaco, Texas, Year in Business: Store Openings, Closings, Job Losses, New Faces<br />Authors:<br />Mike Copeland<br />Source:<br />Waco Tribune-Herald (TX); 01/04/2004<br />Accession Number:<br />2W60226039647<br />Database:<br />Newspaper Source<br />Translate Full Text:<br /> Choose LanguageEnglish/ArabicEnglish/Bulgarian英语/简体中文英語/繁體中文English/CzechEnglish/DanishEnglish/DutchAnglais/FrançaisEnglisch/DeutschEnglish/GreekEnglish/HausaEnglish/HebrewEnglish/HindiEnglish/HungarianEnglish/IndonesianInglesi/Italiano英語/日本語English/KoreanEngelsk/NordmannEnglish/PersianEnglish/PolishInglés/PortuguêsEnglish/PashtoEnglish/RomanianАнглийский/РусскийInglés/EspañolEnglish/SerbianEnglish/SwedishEnglish/ThaiEnglish/Urdu <br />HTML Full Text<br />Waco, Texas, Year in Business: Store Openings, Closings, Job Losses, New Faces<br /><br /><br />Listen<br /> American Accent<br /> British Accent<br /> Australian Accent<br /> <br /> Slow Reading Speed<br /> Medium Reading Speed<br /> Fast Reading Speed<br /> Help<br /><br /><br /><br />Jan. 4--It was not business as usual last year in Waco. In fact, one might describe it as a mad, mad 2003.<br />Veterans and community leaders got angry over a recommendation to close the Waco Veterans Affairs Hospital.<br />Some restaurant owners became moody over the new smoking ordinance and the money they had to shell out to create separate smoking areas. Some chose to ban smoking altogether.<br />Waco fliers complained about American Eagle charging lower fares in Killeen than in Waco. They cheered up when SkyWest began flying out of Waco, giving Eagle competition and Waco fliers price relief.<br />Kmart closed, to the chagrin of its loyal customers. Piccadilly likewise jumped the good ship Waco.<br />A $70 million shopping center began to take shape, and experts say it will reshape Waco's retail future.<br />Wal-Mart broke ground on a supercenter on Hewitt Drive and a merchandise return center in South Waco.<br />Jack Stewart left the chamber, and a former Navy pilot took over Waco's biggest industry, L-3 Communications.<br />A Holstein cow in Washington state was found to have mad cow disease, creating shockwaves felt around the world -- and in Waco.<br />The impact of most of these events is not yet fully known. But one can expect that most, if not all, of the following top 10 stories will have an effect on Waco for many months to come.<br />-- L-3 SOAP OPERA: When L-3 Communications sneezes, the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce reaches for a tissue. L-3 is Waco's largest industrial employer, with more than 1,400 employees, so everything that goes on at its massive defense plant at the Texas State Technical College airport is magnified.<br />Last year was an up-and-down year for L-3. Jerry Iverson, site manager, expressed frustration over L-3's failure to land new contracts for the Waco plant shortly before he retired on Aug. 1. And an anonymous employee sent the Tribune-Herald several e-mails, predicting dire times and massive layoffs if the plant didn't get more work. In August and September, L-3 gave pink slips to nearly 70 people.<br />Then in November, L-3 concluded a $300 million, nine-year project in which the company converted E-6A planes to E-6B flying command posts for the U.S. Navy. The company hopes to win a $1 billion contract to upgrade avionics in the E-6Bs over 10 years.<br />Congress improved the mood at L-3 by approving an extra $30.3 million in aircraft modifications to be performed there. By November, L-3 actually was advertising to fill 55 positions, including engineering spots.<br />The year, it would seem, ended on a good note.<br />-- VETERANS AFFAIRS HOSPITAL: Waco's VA Hospital has been targeted for closure by a group looking into restructuring the nation's VA system. The VA has been a fixture in Waco since the 1930s. A neighborhood has grown up around it, and veterans live in group homes nearby.<br />Besides treating patients, the VA hospital serves as an economic stimulus. About 800 people work there, and their jobs could be jeopardized. Waco-based economist Ray Perryman said the VA pumps $203 million into the local economy each year. It contributes to 1,968 jobs in Central Texas -- including those at the hospital -- and to an annual payroll of $74 million and $29.8 million in retail sales.<br />Community and elected leaders have rallied in support of the VA, hoping to convince VA Secretary Anthony J. Principi that closing the Waco VA is not a good idea. Principi toured the hospital on Friday.<br />-- RETAIL FRENZY: Construction crews have worked days and some nights for months now on a new shopping center going up at State Highway 6 (West Loop 340) and Interstate 35. AIG Baker of Birmingham, Ala., is building Central Texas Marketplace at a cost of $70 million.<br />The first phase of the 1 million-square-foot marketplace opens this spring, the second phase this fall.<br />Observers believe this center will become a regional draw, pulling shoppers off Interstate 35. Kandace Menning, who manages Richland Mall, said she doesn't dread the shopping center's arrival, but she knows it will be another competitor with which she'll have to contend. The mall will also have to deal with the loss of one its larger tenants, Old Navy, which will move to the marketplace sometime this spring.<br />Belk, Ross, Marshalls, Gart Sports, Kohl's and Bed Bath & Beyond are among the stores moving in to the center.<br />Fast-food and sit-down restaurants also will dot the marketplace, and the developers hope for a book store and other "lifestyle" shops, including a spa, nail salon, big-and-tall shop and party store.<br />-- TARGET ON TARGET: Waco's new Target Greatland store held a preview party on the evening of March 4, and the place was swamped.<br />The cash registers were open for those who wanted to do more than munch on goodies and hear speeches. Manager Thomas Teodorczyk said the store, at Wooded Acres Drive and Bosque Boulevard, had 465 transactions during the first hour and 15 minutes.<br />The new Target was built where Lake Air Mall had been. During the Christmas holidays, sales were 30 to 40 percent higher than they were in 2002 at Waco's old Target store at Sanger Avenue and State Highway 6, which has closed.<br />-- FLYING TO HOUSTON: SkyWest Airlines entered the Waco market in 2003, flying daily between Waco Regional Airport and George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston. It links up Waco passengers with Continental Airlines, which flies around the world.<br />The airline's Aug. 1 arrival means Waco fliers have a choice, something they had not had since Continental left the market after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Travelers can fly American Eagle to Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, where they can link up with American Airlines, or they can take SkyWest to Houston.<br />Waco fliers are enjoying the new service, as well as the price war SkyWest's arrival has created.<br />Airport departures were up 75 percent in November 2003 from November 2002, statistics show.<br />-- TSTC REGIONAL AIRPORT: The Texas State Technical College airport likewise generated some news last year, with civic and business leaders talking about turning it into a regional airport.<br />Former Waco City Councilman Bill Carden -- who in May lost his re-election bid to Maurice Labens -- said TSTC airport could become Alliance Airport South, comparing it with Ross Perot Jr.'s airfield north of Fort Worth, where Fortune 500 companies have placed plants and distribution centers.<br />Other proponents point out that the TSTC airport sits near Interstate 35, whereas Waco Regional Airport is 12 miles away from the highway. A 1,000-acre industrial park called Texas Central Aeroplex has been created near TSTC airport, and it is ready to welcome new industry.<br />President Bush uses TSTC airport when he flies into Central Texas to visit his Crawford ranch.<br />If TSTC were to become a regional airport, the commercial airlines that now fly out of Waco Regional Airport would fly out of TSTC. Meanwhile, Waco Regional could serve as a general aviation airport, accommodating private fliers, for example.<br />Talk of making TSTC a regional airport has died down, with city officials preoccupied with efforts to save the Waco VA Hospital. But the issue may find new life in the future.<br />-- NEW HOSPITAL: Hillcrest Health System dropped a bombshell in September, announcing it would spend $100 million to build a children's and community hospital next to the Wallace Jewell 16-screen theater on U.S. Highway 84 in Woodway.<br />Arthur L. Hohenberger, president and CEO of the system, said construction will begin late this year or early next.<br />When the facility is finished, Hohenberger said, Hillcrest probably will need to increase employment by 450.<br />And Hillcrest is not stopping there. It has pledged to spend $15 million improving its main campus on Herring Avenue in North Waco.<br />Additions will include a Heart Care Center of Excellence.<br />Real estate agents say they already are getting inquiries from physicians wanting to build offices near Hillcrest's new hospital.<br />Retail and restaurant development also could spring up around it.<br />-- COMING & GOING: Jack Stewart, 58, left the presidency of the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce last year to become executive vice president for business development at WCI Texas, a local construction firm.<br />Stewart had served as the top paid employee of the chamber for 13 years. During his watch, Waco attracted the Coca-Cola juice plant, later renamed the Minute Maid plant, and a Caterpillar dump-truck manufacturing plant that has temporarily closed but may reopen.<br />He also administered the economic development fund that Waco and McLennan County created to attract industry. Each pumps $750,000 annually into that fund, which helped Waco land a new Wal-Mart return center and Tractor Supply's new distribution facility.<br />The chamber's executive committee continues to search for Stewart's successor.<br />L-3 also found itself looking for a new local chief, and found one in retired Navy Rear Adm. John E. Boyington Jr., 56. Boyington, who ended a 33-year military career last year, succeeded Iverson, who retired at age 61.<br />Richard Howell, 47, was hired last year as Waco's new aviation director, following Jimmie Hanes, who resigned in late 2002 but had been serving on a contract basis. Howell, a San Francisco native, most recently directed the Southwest Georgia Regional Airport.<br />-- COAL PLANT IN RIESEL: Could the community of Riesel become home to a $1 billion coal-powered electricity generating plant?<br />The deal is not final, but LS Power Development Corp., based in St. Louis, confirmed in September it is looking at Riesel as the possible site of a plant that would cost between $500 million and $1.2 billion.<br />Such a plant would have a staggering impact on the local tax base. For example, the Riesel school district's tax revenues last year were $746,000. If the district were to charge LS just more than half of its current tax rate of $1.63 per $100 property valuation, LS would pay roughly $8.6 million a year in school taxes on a $1 billion facility.<br />LS would put about 1,200 people to work building the plant, which would employ 100. The company had considered other sites in Texas, but it is serious enough about Riesel to have begun negotiations with landowners.<br />-- ADIOS KMART, PICCADILLY: In September 1994, Kmart opened a new 190,000-square-foot supercenter at New Road and Franklin Avenue.<br />That was before Wal-Mart, Lowe's and Franklin Village arrived at that intersection. Kmart was a pioneer, in that respect.<br />Alas, the supercenter closed in 2003, ending Kmart's presence in Waco.<br />It was among 53 locations in Texas and more than 300 nationwide that the retailer shuttered as part of its reorganization under bankruptcy protection.<br />Fans of the Piccadilly cafeteria chain also felt the sting of abandonment last year.<br />Waco's only two locations -- at 1800 N. Valley Mills Drive and in Richland Mall -- were shuttered as Piccadilly sought to cut costs.<br /><br />LOCAL BUSINESS LEADERS RANK TOP STORIES OF 2003<br />The Tribune-Herald asked several business people to identify what they thought were the top five local business stories of 2003. They could include national business trends that had a local impact, or they could choose to identify business stories that were exclusive to Waco.<br />These leaders represent something of a cross-section of Waco's business community; they include the owner of a small business and representatives of the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce. That mix created a variety of stories on the respective lists.<br />Appearing on several lists was the proposed closing of the Waco Veterans Affairs Hospital. Federal officials have proposed a $4.6 billion restructuring of veterans health care nationally and have suggested the closure of seven VA hospitals, Waco's among them. The final decision rests with VA Secretary Anthony J. Principi, who toured Waco's 71-year-old hospital on Friday.<br />Central Texas Marketplace, a $70 million shopping complex, also was a popular choice. Construction began in 2003 on the center, which is going up at West Loop 340 and Interstate 35.<br />Some of the choices reflected the business leaders' own concerns. Mike Barnes, president/economic development for the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce, focused almost exclusively on Waco's success at attracting or keeping industry.<br />Sammy Citrano, a restaurant owner, picked Waco's new smoking ordinance as his No. 1 story.<br />No doubt many business stories didn't get mentioned. It was also an eventful year for the national economy and international affairs. But perhaps the following lists provide some indication of broader events.<br />SAMMY CITRANO, owner, George's Restaurant & Catering; spokesman, Waco Restaurant Association:<br /> . "The smoking laws in Waco." In June, the city's new smoking ordinance went into effect. It bans smoking in most public buildings, with some exceptions for small businesses, tobacco shops and bars that don't serve food. Businesses can allow smoking in walled-off, separately ventilated areas, and restaurants can allow it anywhere between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m.<br /> . L-3 Communications getting more contracts." Waco's largest employer received an additional $30.3 million for aircraft modifications in the defense budget Congress approved in 2003.<br /> . "Tractor Supply and Wal-Mart distribution centers." Tractor Supply opened a 305,000-square-foot distribution center that eventually will employ 170, while Wal-Mart began work on a merchandise return center that will employ 300 when it opens later this year. These projects were announced in late 2002, but work began on each in 2003.<br /> . "Ongoing tourism President Bush brought to Central Texas."<br /> . "Construction at Baylor University." Baylor has launched a multimillion-dollar construction campaign as part of its Vision 2012 initiative.<br /><br />GREG MAY, owner, Greg May Honda:<br /> . "Proposed closing of the Waco Veterans Affairs Hospital."<br /> . "Central Texas Marketplace."<br /> . "Jack Stewart resigning as president of the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce." A replacement has not been named.<br /> . "Kathy Rice stepping down as Waco city manager."<br /> . "Proposed hotel/conference center on Lake Brazos." Bill Hindman Jr. of New Orleans has proposed placing a 238-room, four-star hotel and conference center worth $40 million between Lake Brazos and University-Parks Drive.<br /><br />MIKE BARNES, president/economic development, Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce:<br /> . "Do It Best Corp. spends $10 million to expand its Hewitt Drive distribution center by 200,000 square feet, creating 20 new jobs."<br /> . "Marathon Power Technologies buys out Norco Inc. of Ridgefield, Conn., and relocates it to Waco, creating 43 new jobs."<br /> . "The Dwyer Group breaks ground on a $1 million office building, with space for more than 40 employees. It also acquires NeoCom Inc., an Ohio-based company that creates private-label software for franchisors, and moves it to Waco."<br /> . "Phoenix Equipment moves into a larger building on Panther Way, and is hiring 25 additional people."<br /> . "The Texas Economic Development Council honors the Waco chamber for its business retention program."<br /><br />LISA AUGUSTINE, manager, Waco Hilton; president, Waco Hotel/Motel Association:<br /> . "President George W. Bush's presence in Crawford continues to be a very big part of the business community. The frequent visits by dignitaries, including those from Japan, Australia and Italy, are significant."<br /> . "The continued building and expansion at Baylor University benefits Waco not only from a business perspective but from a quality of life perspective. The school continues to move toward its Vision 2012."<br /> . "Waco is seeing a retail explosion, from the shopping facility being opened on State Highway 6, to the Target Greatland and the shops popping up around it, to the new Eckerd and Krispy Kreme opening up on New Road."<br /> . "Continental Airlines resuming air service to Waco this summer is wonderful. That will help with economic development."<br /> . "The new softball complex (Waco Riverbend Park) already has brought a significant number of visitors to Waco, and the numbers will only increase as the years go by. Our research shows that it rivals any such facility in Texas."<br /><br />KEN COOPER, Cooper & Horn Builders:<br /> . "Baylor University expansion. I see that as a positive impact on Waco's economy and quality of life, especially the Mayborn Museum Complex and the new Baylor Sciences Building."<br /> . "The new mall, Central Texas Marketplace. I think it's going to be a regional attraction, with new stores, better deals, more options. It will keep people in Waco instead of traveling to Dallas and Austin."<br /> . "Highway 84 growth. Hillcrest's announcement will have an impact on us. Andy Horn and I have had doctors tell us they want to be in our Hidden Valley subdivision, but it's difficult to justify the time it would take to get to Hillcrest's existing location. With Hillcrest moving to 84, we should see additional growth on the west side of town."<br />Hillcrest Health System in September announced it would spend $100 million to build a children's and community hospital next to the Wallace Jewell 16-screen theater on Highway 84. Its main campus will remain in North Waco.<br /> 4. "Proposed closing of the Waco Veterans Affairs Hospital. I have it at No. 4 only because its fate has not been determined."<br /> 5. "The success of Curves International." Waco-based Curves has grown to 6,734 women's exercise locations in the United States, Europe and elsewhere. Founder Gary Heavin is building a new international headquarters on Highway 84, near the First Baptist Church of Woodway.<br /><br />CAROL WEAVER, owner, Mattress Sleep Centers:<br /> . "Waco's no-smoking ordinance. I agree with it. I like the fact I can go into a restaurant and don't have to walk past the smoking section before I eat, though I know some people like a cigarette after their meal."<br /> . "Central Texas Marketplace."<br /> . "Possibility of the Veterans Affairs Hospital closing."<br /> . "The Tractor Supply warehouse."<br /> . "The Wal-Mart return center, and construction of the new Wal-Mart Supercenter on Hewitt Drive."<br /><br />JIM HALLER, executive vice president, First National Bank of Central Texas; chairman, Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce:<br /> . "I think the possible closing of the VA hospital would have to top my list. I'm so impressed with the way city and county officials have led the fight to keep it, and with the determination this community has shown. If we keep it, that's wonderful; if we lose it, that's absolutely horrible."<br /> . "I think the Tractor Supply distribution center is big for our city.<br />Not only because of the people it employs but because it is sitting in such a prominent place on Interstate 35. It shows what a nice new facility Waco has."<br /> 3. "Right up there with Tractor Supply is construction of the Wal-Mart return center."<br /> 4. "The new shopping center at Interstate 35 and Loop 340 is huge.<br />Having all that traffic at a busy intersection is another image boost for Waco. And we're getting some stores we've coveted for a long time."<br />5. "The many impressive construction projects at Baylor University, especially the science center and discovery center, are good indicators of the future of Baylor. And as we all know, Baylor means a lot to our city."<br /><br />-- Compiled by Mike CopelandPseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-72264299572369195042011-01-30T12:39:00.000-08:002011-01-30T12:40:55.635-08:00European Style Mall Opens Near Cincinnati<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi3vj_79sG3GBSVbmr2cVaTlTfcxLoknRpZZMSh4513BaoinXlRPkzGuc34jq8NSicl8Ggy4je0MXEUwkUDsxXHoem1QuJn_qYgXYSuRRJLUtk8204lG1s-fCqEItjwz1Zl6SqGaYGulOZr/s1600/Screen+shot+2011-01-30+at+2.37.45+PM.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 351px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi3vj_79sG3GBSVbmr2cVaTlTfcxLoknRpZZMSh4513BaoinXlRPkzGuc34jq8NSicl8Ggy4je0MXEUwkUDsxXHoem1QuJn_qYgXYSuRRJLUtk8204lG1s-fCqEItjwz1Zl6SqGaYGulOZr/s400/Screen+shot+2011-01-30+at+2.37.45+PM.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5568081526629834610" /></a><br /><br />The Portsmouth Daily Times, October 18, 1984Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-60346557941172348532011-01-01T08:18:00.001-08:002011-01-01T08:21:14.294-08:00Mall plans please township<span style="font-style:italic;">An article about the <b>Festivals of Waterford</b> plan that would renovate <b>Summit Place Mall</b> in Waterford, Michigan. This obviously never happened.</span><br /><br />2002-12-11 <br />Mall plans please township<br />Michael Hoskins<br /><br />The owner of Waterford's destination shopping center at Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake roads has gotten a thumbs-up from the township's Planning Commission on conceptual site plans for an indoor water park, the first step needed before that aspect of the renovation project can begin.<br /><br />The mall is now referred to as Festivals of Waterford, after scrapping the name Summit Place. Mall owner Rich Marr introduced his first set of conceptual drawings for the water park to the nine-member commission on Tuesday, Nov. 26, and the commission members voiced their approval. The commission was expected to vote in favor of the plans during a meeting held yesterday, Tuesday, Dec. 10.<br /><br />The 70,000-square-foot water park - one of five "festivals" being created at the mall - would fill the vacated Montgomery Ward space with a wave pool, six slides reaching as high as 65 feet, a lazy river for inner-tubing, and multiple water-themed play areas and pools for children.<br /><br />According to estimates from Marr, the cost of the water park would be $20 million - money which owners have asked the township to provide in exchange for ownership of the indoor water park facility (see related story).<br /><br />One aspect mall owners must deal with in completing the water park includes going before township officials, who regulate planning and zoning requirements inside the facility. The Planning Commission unanimously approved a resolution at its Tuesday, Nov. 26 meeting to not oppose the plans at this initial stage.<br /><br />"It makes sense for us not to oppose this site plan at this phase," said Planning Commission Chairwoman Sandra Werth during the Nov. 26 session. "It's our opinion that this is vitally important to the township, and it looks impressive."<br /><br />Township Planning Director Larry Lockwood said fire department personnel has reviewed the site plans and don't foresee any problems, and that township officials will continue working with the new mall owner throughout the entire planning process.<br /><br />Mall general manager Joe Tyree and Marr will submit a rezoning request in January to the Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA), seeking a change involving the height of a water tower. Currently, the maximum height allowed under existing ordinances would be 40 feet. Since the tower itself will stretch to 100 feet and include water slides of up to 65 feet and the roofline would have to accommodate those heights, zoning changes must be made in order for the plan to be achieved.<br /><br />"This new roofline is quite dominant, and will make quite a statement," Lockwood said. "The planning staff and township engineers have been pleased with the plans submitted so far."<br /><br />Hoping to revive the mall's slumping image, lure families back and fill the facility's vacant storefronts, Marr and Tyree first unveiled their vision to township officials on Nov. 12 and 13. Along with the indoor water park, the $60-million renovation project would involve a series of other "festivals" inside the mall, including a 60,000-square-foot family entertainment and amusement center, a boardwalk, a children's play area and a trolley to transport shoppers from one side of the mall to the other.<br /><br />"We need to make this a destination spot for families," mall owner Marr said. "So maybe we shouldn't be a Summit, maybe we should be something else that helps us move more toward the entertainment aspect and draw people in from outside the (immediate) area. The goal is to attract a diversity of people and products, and that's why we're focusing on families."<br /><br />The first aspect of the plan - the children's play center - opened up to the public for the first time two days after Thanksgiving, just in time for the holiday shopping season. The play center now stands in the heart of the mall, where a cafe once stood.<br /><br />As the hub of the 1.3 million square-foot shopping center, the $500,000 play center encompasses a 5,600 square-foot area. Designed by Canada-based DeltaPlay Company, the three-level fortress of fun for kids features 47 interactive play features, including multiple games and toys, twisting tubes and tunnels, snaking slides, colored climbing apparatus, ball fountains and miniature automobiles that children can race up to 2.5 miles an hour around the bordering race track. He said it supports a maximum of about 200 children.<br /><br />Another part of the plan calls for a family entertainment and amusement center, which would be built along the Sears wing after the few existing retail shops are moved. This 60,000 square-foot facility would include theme rides, ticket games, skeet ball, bumper cars and other features.<br /><br />"There's a great market in 2- to 14-year-olds, who have to bring those people called parents and grandparents along with them," Marr said. "This plan provides options for everyone, and offers things that appeal to each particular age."<br /><br />Marr said he is hoping to have construction on the entertainment and amusement center mostly - if not all - completed within a year.<br /><br />On the outside of the mall, Marr said, plans include enhancing the building's facade with larger entries, glass lighting panels to accommodate changing seasons, and landscape and lighting improvements outside and in the parking lots.<br /><br />Managers told the Waterford Township Board of Trustees recently that more than an estimated $40 million would have to be spent on redeveloping the exterior of the property.<br /><br />Marr said he hopes to attract more restaurants and anchor stores into a 10,000- to 40,000-square-foot area, possibly a Borders or Barnes and Noble-type establishment, as the project progresses.<br /><br />The closed, free-standing cinema complex at the site will most likely be torn down this winter. Marr said he does not expect to add cinemas to the project because there is not enough demand in the local market. The Montgomery Ward automotive center will also be leased out.<br /><br />Opening as the Pontiac Mall in 1962, the facility was one of the first enclosed shopping centers in the country. After several expansions in 1983, the mall was renamed Summit Place to appeal to a wider customer base in rapidly-growing Oakland County. Northwestern Mutual acquired Summit Place in December 2000 from the prior owners, Summit Mall LLC, and Marr's Namco announced its finalized purchase last April.Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8694132191369057434.post-12595233100983729852010-06-18T15:12:00.001-07:002010-06-18T15:13:26.552-07:00Please wait...Currently I'm importing things from <a href="http://retailaddictionblog.blogspot.com/">Retail Addiction Blog</a>. This will replace it.Pseudo3Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17848368606946150471noreply@blogger.com0