Showing posts with label Carousel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carousel. Show all posts

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Picture of the Day: 11/14/2015

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Here’s an interesting picture of a tree with the Carousel standing behind it sometime in the early ‘90s. This picture was taken from inside Monk’s.

Friday, November 13, 2015

Picture of the Day: 11/13/2015

Carousel Early '90s 2

Here is a really good shot of the Carousel sometime in the early ‘90s. Really brings back memories.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Picture of the Day: 11/10/2015

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Here’s an interesting shot of the Carousel taken from Monk’s, presumably taken in the early morning hours since it’s not running. Photo was taken sometime in the early ‘90s.

Sunday, November 08, 2015

Picture of the Day: 11/8/2015

Carousel July 1989

Here is a good shot of the Carousel taken in July 1989. I really wish I could find a higher resolution scan of this picture.

Saturday, November 07, 2015

Picture of the Day: 11/7/2015

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This is a shot taken inside Monk’s, looking out at the food court sometime in the early ‘90s.

Friday, November 06, 2015

Picture of the Day: 11/6/2015

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Here’s a picture of some folks riding the Carousel sometime in the early ‘90s. This picture brings me VERY pleasant memories. You can also see part of the Tilt Arcade towards the left of the picture.

Wednesday, November 04, 2015

Picture of the Day: 11/4/2015

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Not sure who these folks are, but this is a picture of the mall’s food court and Carousel in I believe January 1991. Amazing how well the mall would light up at nighttime.

Monday, August 04, 2014

Happy 38th Birthday

Sixteenth Anniversary Ad October 16, 1992

Carolina Circle Mall officially opened this day in 1976. Over the past 9 years of having this blog, I’ve said so many things about the mall that it seems like there might not be anything else to say.

However, I got to thinking awhile ago about the memories I have of going to Carolina Circle Mall as a child and how much I enjoyed the overall atmosphere, not just the Carousel. Compared to the other malls in the area at that time, and even nowadays, there was something different about Carolina Circle, but what was it?

I think that unlike other malls that were built strictly for business and retail, Carolina Circle Mall was designed to be not only retail, but for entertainment. It was the only mall in the area with a movie theater attached to it and most notably, it was the only mall in the area to ever have an Ice Chalet or a Carousel (however Hanes Mall in Winston-Salem now has a small Carousel). Even though Carolina Circle Mall failed financially, I will always remember it for the special features it had that set it apart from other malls but most importantly, the memories the mall gave me.

Thursday, June 02, 2011

Picture of the Day: 6/2/2011

Carousel 1993

This right here is my favorite picture of Carolina Circle Mall. This is the famous, and sometimes infamous, Carousel! This picture brings back more memories than any other picture of the mall. Photo taken sometime in the early ‘90s.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Picture of the Day: 5/28/2011

Boy on Carousel 1994

That’s not me, but it just as well should be. I was on that Carousel just about once a week when I was a kid. Photo taken in August 1994.

Friday, May 06, 2011

Picture of the Day: 5/6/2011

Carousel Tea-Cup 1994

Whenever I rode the Carousel at Carolina Circle Mall, this was what I would always sit in; the spinning tea cup. Picture taken in August 1994.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Carousel Tea-Cup August 1994

Carousel Tea-Cup 1994

This is the spinning tea-cup on the mall's Carousel in August 1994. Whenever I rode the Carolina Circle Carousel, I always rode in this thing. My dad even got in trouble once for spinning it too hard! From the Greensboro News & Record.

Boy Riding Carousel August 1994

Boy on Carousel 1994

I love this one. This is a picture of a boy (not me) riding the Carousel at the mall in 1994. From the Greensboro News & Record.

Friday, February 05, 2010

New Ice Rink Discovery

I was going through the Google news archives this evening and I came across some interesting information regarding the closure of the Ice Chalet.

First, let’s backtrack to August of 2009. That was when I finally discovered that the month the Carousel Era began was November 1988. That was good in itself, but that still didn’t tell me when the Ice Chalet closed.

Well this evening, I found a newspaper article from Burlington’s Times News from I believe March 1988 which included a story regarding someone recently skating at Carolina Circle Mall’s ice rink.

Thus, that finally partly answered my question. Obviously, the Ice Chalet closed in 1988. It had to have been between March 1988 and November 26, 1988 (the date the Carousel opened). The only question remaining is when in 1988. I’m led to believe it was before June 1988, because I have a newspaper ad from that month which used the Carousel Era Circle Crescent emblem.

Just some random deep thinking. But at least I now know that the Ice Chalet closed in 1988. Still hurts that I missed the Ice Chalet by only a year.

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

What Carolina Circle Mall Has Done for Me

33 years

33 years ago today, Carolina Circle Mall opened in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Yesterday, I sat down at my computer and I reflected on the 19 years I’ve spent with Carolina Circle Mall. I then typed my thoughts up into an 8 page Word document that I would like to share with you.

If you would like, head over to the Carolina Circle Mall Fan Club on Facebook and post what Carolina Circle Mall has done for you.

Here it is.

Throughout my 19 year life, people and businesses have come and gone. But the one business that has remained as a major part of my life, even though the building no longer exists, is Carolina Circle Mall.

Unlike most of the people, whose fondest memories of the mall are of the Ice Rink Era in the 1970s and 1980s, my fondest memories of the mall happen to come from the Carousel Era in the 1990s. This is due to the fact that I was born in 1989; one year after the Ice Rink closed and was replaced with the magnificent Carousel. But as I always say, memories are in the eyes of the beholder.

My first trip to Carolina Circle Mall was in 1990 when I was only a baby; less than a year old in fact. My father took me for a ride on the Carousel by carefully holding me down on a horse. That moment as an infant had a profound effect on my life, obviously.

As I got older, I began to enjoy other aspects of the mall. I think my fondest memories of Carolina Circle Mall took place from about 1992 to about 1996. My favorite stores at the mall were Camelot Music, Everything’s a Dollar, Eckerd Drug, Radio Shack, and most of all, Montgomery Ward.

wards There were two aspects of Montgomery Ward that I liked. First of all, Montgomery Ward was a lot like Sears in that they had a little bit of everything, including electronics, furniture, lawn and garden equipment, and clothing. The other feature of Montgomery Ward I enjoyed was the actual feel of the store. Montgomery Ward had this certain comfortable atmosphere. I’ll never forget the smell of hairspray and the heat that would hit me as I walked past the store’s beauty parlor.

One of my fondest memories of Montgomery Ward occurred in I believe 1995. I was fishing through a bargain bin upstairs and I came across a VHS tape from circa 1988 with a recording of the old classic “Pee-wee’s Playhouse”. My parents bought it for me and I immediately became a fan of Pee-wee Herman.

Camelot Music Camelot Music was probably my second favorite Carolina Circle store. Not only did they sale music, they also sold videotapes. In October of 1994, I vividly remember getting a VHS tape featuring Halloween episodes of various Nickelodeon cartoons, including Rocko’s Modern Life, Doug, and my personal all time favorite, Rugrats. I also purchased many audio cassettes there (keep in mind I didn’t start listening to CDs until 1997). Audio cassettes I recall getting there were various Peter, Paul & Mary albums, two Mamas & the Papas albums, and believe it or not, a Jerry Reed tape (When You’re Hot You’re Hot!)

Everything’s a Dollar was another favorite of mine. Every time I’d go there with my grandmother, she would give me $1.06 (North Carolina Sales Tax was cheaper back then), and I would go in there and buy either a cheap toy or candy.

Carolina Circle 6 Cinema 5 There was also the Circle Six Theatres, which in 1992, was where I saw my first movie at a theater, Home Alone 2. It was such a nice theater. In fact, in-mall movie theaters are getting to be hard to find nowadays. Other movies I recall seeing there were The Flintstones Move (that silly live-action version of The Flintstones) and The Lion King, both in 1994.

Food Court 1 The restaurants at the mall were excellent as well. There was this little-known restaurant at the food court called “Circle Cafe & Deli” where I would always eat a grilled cheese for lunch at. Sometime in late 1994 or early 1995, Circle Cafe & Deli closed and was reopened as “Subs & Spuds”, a sandwich shop. I remember the first time I went there, I ordered a sub. Let’s just say it was ironically Carolina Circle Mall’s fault that I hate mayonnaise. Fortunately, I soon discovered they had hot dogs and grilled cheese sandwiches that tasted the same as Circle Cafe & Deli.

Another restaurant I went to quite often was Piccadilly Cafeteria. I’ll never forget the design of that restaurant. It had a certain gothic charm to it, including dark lighting, a fancy logo, and brick walls all over the place.

Carousel 1993 As I said earlier, the part of Carolina Circle Mall that I enjoyed the most as a kid was the Carousel. The Carousel was the largest in-mall Carousel I have ever seen in my life. Other mall Carousels are tiny in comparison. By the time I was 4 years old, I discovered that the best place to sit on the Carousel was one of those spinning coasters. One time, my dad got blasted out by the Carousel operator for spinning the coaster too hard!

Speaking of the Carousel operator, I vividly remember what she looked like. She was kind of short, had long brown hair, wore glasses, and also wore a striped v-neck shirt. Don’t ask how I actually remember that.

Day After Thanksgiving November 26, 1993 2 One interesting memory I have of the mall itself happened on November 26, 1993. It was the day after Thanksgiving and the mall’s Santa Claus jumped out of a helicopter and parachuted into the mall’s parking lot. I wasn’t actually at the mall when it happened, but I vividly remember watching a video of it on the WFMY News 2 6:00 News that evening at home. When I saw it, I actually thought it was Santa’s sleigh flying over the mall! This was actually repeated in January of 1994 when several Elvis impersonators parachuted into the mall.

Another fun little memory of Carolina Circle Mall occurred in early 1994. My parents had bought a patio swing at a little kiosk stand in the mall corridor. Later that day, my dad and I took his pickup truck to the mall to pick it up. The man that was operating the stand, actually let us go out of one of the mall’s emergency exits, since it would be quicker to get to the truck from that way. I’m not sure if it set off any alarms though.

Christmas Ad December 2, 1994 2 Christmas was probably my favorite time of the year at Carolina Circle Mall. They would fully decorate the mall with trees, wreaths, and glitter. In the mall’s first floor corridor, just outside of Montgomery Ward, was a children’s Christmas maze that you could walk through. I seem to remember it having toys and funhouse mirrors throughout the maze.

The earliest memory I have of something bad happening at the mall occurred in 1994 when Belk closed off its first floor, which was then used as a post office.

Inside Near Montgomery Ward 1989 One of the things that really attached me to the mall was the feel it had to it. Inside the mall, everything was colored either blue, lime green, or pink. Each column had blue neon lights attached to the top of them and the second-floor railings were completely stainless-steel. The light fixtures along the walls looked like a combination of tin-cans and Ralph-Lauren cologne bottles (don’t ask why I think that).

Outside were these tall, green, structures at each major mall entrance. At night, bright red neon lights turneMain Entrance 1988d on, turning the structures red hot. Thank you Steven Swain for this picture.

This may sound strange, but it seems like every time I would go to the mall, there would be at least one store playing the 1989 Phil Collins hit, Two Hearts. Because of that, I consider Two Hearts to be my personal Carolina Circle Mall theme song.

Many more wonderful memories would occur at Carolina Circle Mall until about 1996, coincidentally around the same time the Macarena became popular. In 1996, many famous Carolina Circle stores went out of business including Waldenbooks, Camelot Music, Piccadilly Cafeteria, and even the Circle Six Theatres. Also around this time was when the unthinkable happened.

It was either late 1996 or early 1997 when my parents broke the news to me that Carolina Circle Mall got rid of the Carousel. This upset me so much that I actually locked myself in the bathroom when my parents wanted to go the mall for the first time since the Carousel closed. I gave in and went anyway. I remember seeing a big empty space where the Carousel once stood, filled in by more food court tables.

One by one, before my eyes, stores were closing. I don’t seem to recall going into the mall’s corridor between about 1998 and 2001 (I still went to Montgomery Ward though).

I’ll never forget the last walk I took through the mall’s corridor. It was on a Saturday afternoon in March of 2001. My mom was shopping at Montgomery Ward so my dad took me through the mall’s corridor to see if anything was left. From what I recall, only Montgomery Ward and some other small store were the only stores still open. The mall looked creepy and dark, yet the lights were still on and the fountains were still running. I thought for sure that my old favorite restaurant Subs & Spuds was still open. I made it as far as the food court when we turned around. Subs & Spuds, including every other restaurant, was closed. I couldn’t handle it anymore so I ran back to Montgomery Ward. It was then I realized that Carolina Circle Mall wasn’t going to last much longer.

And I was right. That same year, in 2001, Montgomery Ward announced that it would be closing all of its United States stores. Carolina Circle Mall’s closed in early 2002, thus closing the mall completely.

Later that year, however, a flea market called "Carolina Flea Market" opened inside the former Carolina Circle Mall Belk location. The day it opened, I rode down there to check it out. They had mostly left the original Belk design untouched, which was very nice.

But what made the flea market special was this. I was walking through the flea market when I noticed that the former Belk mall entrance was covered in glass. I walked up to it and saw something that really made my day. I peeked through the glass and I saw the Carolina Circle Mall corridor in all its beauty. It looked beautiful. Nothing had changed since the year before when I last walked through there. I continued going to that flea market every weekend for the next several months just to take a look inside Carolina Circle Mall. The flea market finally closed in 2003.

One day in October of 2003 when I was 13, I was in study hall at Pendle Hill Christian School. A friend of mine, whose father owned the Race Land go-kart track across from Carolina Circle Mall, told me that his dad heard they were going to tear down Carolina Circle Mall and build a Wal-Mart in its place. What makes that event so unique is that I found out about these plans about a year before everyone else did.

In the summer of 2004, this school rumor I heard became confirmed as truth when Don Linder announced plans to tear down Carolina Circle Mall and build a Wal-Mart and shopping center in its place. I then decided that I had to head out to the then abandoned and vandalized Carolina Circle Mall to take pictures of it before it was too late.

After six months of procrastination, I finally made it to Carolina Circle Mall on February 21, 2005. I took many pictures of not only the mall, but also Toys 'R Us across the street.

Carolina Circle Mall Before Demolition 008 I then pulled up to the former main entrance and noticed that the plywood covering the doors had been partly removed, due to the vandals. What made the trip interesting was that I was able to take a look inside the mall through my car. I was struck by how much of the mall hadn't rotted away, due to the fact that it had already been abandoned for the past 3 years.

At school the following morning, my teacher turned the radio onto 99.5 WMAG. The radio then began playing my old Carolina Circle Mall theme song, Two Hearts by Phil Collins. This, combined with the fact that I had just been at the abandoned mall snapping pictures, immediately caused a chain-reaction, causing all of the memories I had ever had of Carolina Circle Mall to activate in my mind. I now realized that Carolina Circle Mall was definitely something worth remembering, and I had to take advantage of the opportunity.

First Floor Near Montgomery Ward That evening, I got on the Internet and did a Google search for “Carolina Circle Mall”. I came across a website, which is no longer on the web, which had recent pictures taken inside the mall. Each picture showed the mall in a somewhat sad state. Every wall seemed to have graffiti written on it, glass was broken, and the ground was completely trashed. However, the mall still seemed to be in fairly good shape, seeing that the light fixtures, signs, and several other features were still intact.

Because of that, I then began to feel somewhat depressed over the fact that the mall would soon be demolished. Everyday after school, I made sure to keep a close eye on Carolina Circle Mall when I would ride past it on US-29. With the help of my best friend, we attempted to make an estimated date of demolition, which wound up being somewhere around May or June of 2005.

Carolina Circle Mall During Demolition 011 Our prediction came true on June 30, 2005. I was riding down US-29 South that day when I happened to glance over at Carolina Circle Mall, only to see it being demolished. I suddenly got struck by a sense of depression. My mall would no longer exist as a mall or an abandoned building. One of the biggest icons of my childhood was being crushed into many pieces before my eyes.

New Emblem3 Finally, in September of 2005, I decided that I had to put my cause online. I started the Carolina Circle City blog that month. I started out posting my memories, some history of the mall, and other information regarding Carolina Circle Mall.

One month later, the greatest thing that could possibly happen, happened. My blog caught the attention of the head editorial director at the Greensboro News & Record. He contacted me by e-mail asking me if I wanted to be interviewed. I of course, said yes. So on October 23, 2005, Carolina Circle City was featured in the editorial section of the local newspaper. People from all over began to visit my blog, recalling their own memories of the mall, such as the Ice Rink and the Circle Six Theatres.

Restroom Sign 001 Another nice event occurred in July 2006. I was on eBay and I got the idea to type in “Carolina Circle Mall” in the search bar. And believe it or not, something did show up; the original sign used to direct customers the mall restrooms. The sign was only $10, but the catch was it was in Fort Mill, South Carolina and the seller did not have a way of shipping it. So, we agreed to meet half way in China Grove, North Carolina, just outside of Salisbury. To this day, I still have the sign hanging from the ceiling over my HD television set.

Home_of_Carolina_Circle_Mallalt By 2007, I decided that a blog wasn’t enough for Carolina Circle Mall. By going to the Internet Archive website, I discovered that Carolina Circle Mall never had its own website while it was still open. I decided that it deserved to have one. So I got my credit card and opened Home of Carolina Circle Mall.com in May of 2007. Home of Carolina Circle Mall has never seemed to be quite as popular as the Carolina Circle City blog, but it still does a pretty good job. The site averages around 15 views each day.

Happy Mallowe'en 1992 In December of 2007, I was at the Greensboro Public Library with a couple of my friends and I decided I would take a look at the microfilm (the library has almost every edition of the Greensboro newspapers). I discovered several ads for Carolina Circle Mall from 1992. I then discovered that this could work to my advantage. To this day, I still go to the library when I get the chance to look for newspaper ads advertising Carolina Circle Mall. I currently have 69 newspaper ads, total. I’m still looking for the “Holy Grail” of mall ads, an actual TV commercial.

The Huffine Mill School #4-052DF 017 In September of 2008, I entered a display into the Central Carolina Fair in Greensboro, showcasing certain aspects of Carolina Circle Mall that I’ve collected over the years. It did not draw any extra traffic to my websites, but it did draw an extra $70 into my bank account! I happened to win 2nd place.

carolinacircle Media attention was received a second time in January of 2009. Again, the News & Record noticed both my blog and my website. A very nice lady called me one afternoon after school and interviewed me, once again. This time, the next day, a photojournalist from the newspaper came by my house and took pictures of me with my restroom sign, as well as me standing by my precious Intel Core 2 Duo powered homebuilt computer with Home of Carolina Circle Mall showing on the screen.

Article #2 was published on January 10, 2009, and once again, viewer traffic surged. It is nice to know that my cause has become a big hit online.

That same month, I started the Carolina Circle Mall Fan Club on Facebook which currently has 572 members, and is still growing. People have been able to reconnect with each other via the Fan Club, and it always makes me happy to read when someone posts a good memory of the mall on the wall.

Image0099 As you can plainly see, Carolina Circle Mall has done so much for me. It gave me the opportunity as a kid to have a place to go to so I can have a fun ride on the Carousel, eat great food, and shop at wonderful stores. That in turn inspired me in the mid-late ‘00s to use those memories to help other people remember the mall as well as I do. I have traveled long distances because of Carolina Circle Mall, I have spent and gained money because of Carolina Circle Mall, and I have made new friends because of Carolina Circle Mall. Right now, I see no way of ending any of this because I am having way too much fun. Sure, there have been times the past several years where I’ve felt discouraged, but that discouragement has always been replaced with joy. I praise the Lord everyday for letting me get this far.

With all that said, I would like to say happy birthday to Carolina Circle Mall. For 33 years, you have given people who grew up in Greensboro in the ‘70s, ‘80s, and ‘90s a fun haven where you could hang out with friends, ice skate, shop, see movies, ride a large Carousel, and meet someone who you would eventually marry. Even after your 2002 closure and 2005 demolition, you are still alive in everyone’s hearts and have given me a hobby that has taken me to many places in life.

And just think. All of this began with a simple ride on a Carousel.

Again, feel free to post your own personal thoughts about Carolina Circle Mall at any of my websites.

Carolina Circle Mall Lights Up for Celebration (November 16, 1988)

Image0004 I was downtown at the library this afternoon and I came across an old newspaper article that finally answers the question I’ve been asking for years, “When did Carolina Circle Mall complete its renovation?”.

Ever since I began my Carolina Circle studies in 2005, I’ve gone by the date given in the July 31, 1996 edition of the Greensboro News & Record, June 1988. I would look and look through every single newspaper from June of 1988 and find absolutely nothing about the renovation completion.

Today, I was going through the November 1988 newspapers trying to find some Carolina Circle Mall Thanksgiving/Christmas ads from that year. I got to the Wednesday, November 16, 1988 edition and I came across this article talking about Carolina Circle Mall’s renovation completion!

Obviously, the date given in the July 31, 1996 newspaper was incorrect.

So anyway, this article gives a good deal of information regarding the renovation, including the improvements made to the mall.

The renovation has always come off as “stupid”, regarding of course to the removal of the Ice Chalet. I, of course, have always preferred the Carousel because it was what I grew up with. I’ll still never forget that afternoon in 1995 when I was eating lunch at the Carolina Circle food court and trying to find scuff marks left from the Ice Chalet!

So here it is, from November 16, 1988, the renovation completion article. FINALLY!!! If only I had the above picture in color.

Tess Morris has one word for the Carolina Circle Mall of yore.

“Drab.”

The lights were low, the floor was dark, and walking from one end of the mall to the other was like negotiating an obstacle course.

“The walkways were kind of like a maze,” says Morris, the mall’s assistant manager. “You’d go left and go right and go left and go right”.

Given those descriptions, hindsight is 20-20, especially after you’ve gotten rid of any problems. It’s no surprise that mall officials are eager for this weekend’s celebration to show off the fruits a $7.5 million renovation.

They hope the renovation, and an eventual “upscaling” of merchandise, will allow them to make a run at Greensboro’s two largest shopping centers: Friendly Shopping Center and Four Seasons Town Centre. Ever since Carolina Circle opened 12 years ago, it has lagged behind the other two shopping centers in size and money-making.

Amidst a two-day festival of song and dance starting Saturday, Carolina Circle shoppers will see a lighter, brighter mall.

Giant pink-and-blue butterflies and banners hang from the ceiling. A brown terrazzo floor was ripped up to make room for a light gray tile floor. Interior support columns have been covered with mirrors and ringed with neon. Brown handrails have given way to chrome, and walkways cross splashing water fountains.

Inside, the mall is five times brighter than it used to be with just 60 lighting fixtures.

“During the nighttime, it was incredibly dark,” says Morris. “Now over a thousand lights illuminate the center. It looks a lot more alive than it ever has”.

Lighting in the parking lots has been upped by 30 percent for safety reasons. Exterior entrances have been spiced up with prism towers and the mall’s new logo: a crescent and circle inside a larger circle.

Back inside the mall, newly nicknamed The Circle, concourses have been straightened. Before, store fronts jutted out in a jagged pattern, blocking customers’ views of some stores and making a crooked path from one end of the mall to the other.

Store fronts have been cut back, allowing a wider, straighter path from one end of the mall to the other. More stores are using glass fronts to display more items and, therefore boost the chances that they’ll sell more.

Shopper convenience is important, but the bottom line is the bottom line, which can be seen in seemingly small changes.

Before the renovation, there was a pair of escalators at one end of the mall. Post-renovation finds the up escalator at one end of the mall and the down escalator at the other end.

“You have to walk past more stores,” Morris says, adding that mall officials are considering putting escalators in the middle of the mall.

The stairs remain where they were, at both ends of the mall, but their angle has been lowered. “They were so steep, and rather dangerous,” Morris says.

The renovation also means more stores. The controversial removal of the lower-level ice-skating rink, skaters wanted it to stay, the mall wanted the unprofitable rink to go, ahs allowed for an additional 4,000 to 4,500 square feet of space that can be leased.

The area around the former rink will be known as the “food court”, and will be highlighted by a $250,000 custom-made carousel that features scenes from Greensboro’s past. The carousel, which was made in Italy, should be set up and ready to ride by November 26.

Some individual stores are still finishing their own renovations. At least two more stores, a 5-7-9 and Jeans West, are scheduled to open soon.

About 75 percent of the mall’s available space is occupied, compared to 69 percent at the lowest point, says mall manager Larry Berry.

Most stores are undergoing “remerchandising” with greater “disposable income” in mind, according to Berry. That means look for more expensive goods.

Berry works for Strouse Greenberg & Co. of Philadelphia, a management company hired by Sunshine-North Carolina Investments, which bought the mall for about $20 million two years ago.

Berry and others have said the mall suffered from poor management before the buyout. Other problems included a stench that wafted to the mall from a city sewer treatment plant, which has been cured.

Berry thinks the renovation is the first step in the mall’s about-face.

“You’ve gotta crawl before you can walk and walk before you can run,” he says. “We’re at the stage now where we’re just getting the shopping center to walk, getting it into motion”.

Inset:

The renovation celebration starts at the center of Carolina Circle Mall’s lower level at 9:45am Saturday. Singers will offer the “Hallelujah Chorus” and “The Star-Spangled Banner” before speeches by Greensboro Mayor Vic Nussbaum and mall officials. Entertainment, acting, beach music, gospel, bluegrass, spoon playing, will continue on three stages Saturday and Sunday.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Happy Belated Carousel Era Anniversary!


Do you realize what happened this past June? 20 years ago in June of 1988, Carolina Circle Mall completed its first and only renovation.

As you may already know, the Circle Crescent emblem began to be used, the mall adopted a new brighter and more colorful color scheme, and the Ice Chalet was removed and was replaced with a Food Court and a $250,000 custom-built Carousel.

I owe a lot of my love for Carolina Circle Mall to the Carousel. In 1990 when I was only a baby, I rode Carolina Circle Mall's Carousel for the first time and immediately fell in love with not only the Carousel, but the mall itself.

Unfortunately, many people blame a good portion of Carolina Circle Mall's demise to the removal of the Ice Chalet. However, as many of you already know, I don't believe that. The Carousel Era had as many fun events the Ice Rink Era had and the Carousel attracted a new crowd of people to the mall. Plus, if Carolina Circle Mall closed because the Ice Chalet was removed, it would have closed in 1988.

In turn, the Carousel was removed sometime around late 1996 when the mall began its demise, even though other Carousel Era related items such as the color scheme and Circle Crescent continued to be used until the mall closed. However, the Carousel at "The Circle" will always remain in many people's memories of growing up in Greensboro during the late 1980s and 1990s.

Saturday, February 09, 2008

A Closer Look at the Carousel Controversy

Today, I thought we would take a closer look at the Ice Rink Vs. Carousel issue and try to make some sense out of all this.

As you all know, Sunshine Properties bought Carolina Circle Mall in August 1986 and hired Strouse Greenberg to renovate the mall in 1987. June of 1988 brought the unveiling of the new Carolina Circle Mall which included a new color scheme, brighter lighting, the famous Circle Crescent Emblem, and most importantly, a new Carousel.

You also probably know that the new Carousel and Food Court required the removal of the Ice Chalet.

And this is where the problem occurs. You see; a lot of people came to the mall for the rink. People loved to watch people ice skate, catch an ice show, and even participate in the skating. From what I've heard, it was pretty awesome.

Carolina Circle Mall's Ice Rink at the time was the only rink in Greensboro. And when the rink was removed in 1988 and replaced with the Carousel, people simply boycotted this new situation.

In television terms, people have decided that this is the point in the mall's history where it "jumped the shark".

People who know me know that I have always preferred the Carousel Era over the Ice Rink Era. However, I try to show respect for the Ice Rink Era as well. The main reason why I prefer the Carousel Era is because it's the era I grew up in. I missed the Ice Rink by about a year and a half.

I believe that the Carousel Era had as much luster as the Ice Rink Era did, but in its own special way.

According to my research at the library and the Internet, many special events occurred during the Carousel Era that could have passed during the Ice Rink Era. Famous people such as Dale Earnhardt, Richard Simmons, and The Muppets visited the mall during the Carousel Era during the 1990s.

Also, other special events during the 1990s included Santa Claus parachuting to the mall in 1993, at least one 4th of July fireworks show in 1994, sports card shows, and Halloween Trick or Treat parties that occurred until at least 1995.

In conclusion, I simply believe the Carousel Era doesn't get the respect it deserves. Don't get me wrong though. The Ice Rink Era was pretty awesome from videos, pictures, and stories I've seen. Gotta love that Cheshire Cat. Any opinions?

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Pinpointing the Carousel Removal Date

Ever since I started my research on Carolina Circle Mall back in 2005, I've discovered something pretty hard to research.

For some reason, I can not find the date the Carousel was removed. But here are some clues I've come across.

Obviously, the Carousel existed all of 1995 because I remember riding it thoroughly throughout that year. Also, an editorial article in the Greensboro News & Record from January 1996 states that a daycare visited the mall Christmas 1995 and mentions the kids riding the Carousel.

I really want to say that the Carousel was still there most of 1996. However, by the second half of 1996 is where it starts getting confusing. My personal memories sort of backlash around this point because it seems like I may remember riding it around that time, however this seems like around the same time the Carousel was removed.

Unfortunately, I have found no newspaper articles relating to this event. So I always simply assume that the Carousel was removed in either late 1996 or early 1997. Any thoughts?

Monday, January 14, 2008

Twins?


Could this possibly be the Carolina Circle Mall Carousel's twin brother?