Showing posts with label Other Malls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Other Malls. Show all posts

Monday, July 27, 2009

It’s a Mall World After All (November 12, 1989)

Inside Near Dillards 1989I was at the downtown library this afternoon, and I came across this very interesting article from the Greensboro News & Record, dated November 12, 1989, titled It’s a Mall World After All.

The article describes how malls were basically taking over the world. Keep in mind that this was 20 years ago, years before the open air shopping center and big box stores began to over-dominate malls.

Carolina Circle Mall, Four Seasons Town Centre, and Friendly Shopping Center are mentioned in this article. In fact, the above picture of Carolina Circle Mall (the second floor corridor) happened to come out of this article. The picture was republished on July 1, 2005 when Carolina Circle Mall began its demolition.

So here it is, from November 12, 1989, It’s a Mall World After All! Wait till you get to the part about what Friendly Shopping Center almost did in 1992! No challenge to copyright intended.

Greensboro is a mall town that’s getting maller.

Its true town center-or should I say centre?-is Four Seasons Town Centre, three stories and three city blocks of Radio Shacks, Chick-Fil-As and Electric Eels. According to Four Seasons’ surveys, most people in Guilford County, at least 67 percent, visit the 1.2 million square-foot mall off Interstate 40 at least once a month.

On the other side of town, recently renovated Carolina Circle Mall is making a comeback, drawing shoppers with its well-stocked department stores and carousel centerpiece.

And the owners of Greensboro’s mall alternative Friendly Shopping Center, say chances are good Friendly will go the way of gurgling fountains and Muzak, Starmount Company has tentative plans to convert the shopping center into an enclosed mall in 1992.

There’s no doubt, it’s a mall world. Teenagers socialize there; fitness buffs walk laps there; kids even trick-or-treat there.

The National Research Bureau reports there are 82,560 malls nationwide. In a typical month, 170 million American adults shop at a mall.

In Rome, cities were often centered around entertainment structures such as The Coliseum. In medieval Europe, the cathedral embodied the religious spirit of the age. Our era of malldom is really the logical conclusion of a society moving from an industrial base to a service-oriented consumer one.

The transition has been hard for some. Writers bermoan the emergence of shopping mall culture, a character in Sam Shepard’s play “Curse of the Starving Class” calls the mall that will replace his home “a zombie city”, and academics build careers studying the phenomenon.

Even Chrissie Hynde lamented the change in The Pretenders’ song, “My City Was Gone,” when she sang “All my favorite places had been replaced by shopping malls”.

As in many cities, Greensboro’s suburban shopping centers and malls have taken the place of the downtown shopping district. The department stores that once drew shoppers downtown moved out in the ‘70s. Department stores such as Thalhimers, Ivey’s, Belk, Sears and Montgomery Ward are now the anchors that draw shoppers to Four Seasons, Friendly, and Carolina Circle Mall.

David Mitchell, an urban sociologist at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, says a city loses something when it centers itself around a mall instead of downtown.

“The mall owners have the ability to control activities and they have a strong desire to maximize buying potential,” Mitchell says. “A downtown has much more diverse activities, festivals, and parades.”

Malls tend to separate people, Mitchell says. When department stores were downtown, he points out, suburban homemakers would mingle with lawyers at lunch, but now the two groups are separated in city and suburbia.

In his 1985 book The Malling of America, William Severini Kowinski argues that malls are still in their infancy and will continue to grow and expand in the next “mallennium”. He predicts a culture of “mallcondo continuum” where you can eat, shop, work, and play in one huge “mallolithic” structure without ever needing to know the outside temperature.

He also believes we will eventually retreat to the mall if natural or man-made disasters threaten our cultural security, just as medieval huddled in castles during the Dark Ages.

“Malls are already becoming the citadels of our time, fortresses protecting the dream worlds of our culture,” Kowinski writes.

America grew attached to the mall in only one generation. Baby Boomers’ car-driven culture addiction to air-conditioning and desire to consume paved the way for the suburban mall.

Malls, in turn, borrowed from television. Boomers’ central culture guide, to create a sanitized version of the American ideal they would eventually replace, Main Street. Four Seasons, for example, is designed to be a mini-Main Street complete with simulated old town square.

Greensboro’s real main street became obsolete as a retail hub when it was physically bypassed by the new paths of the car culture, Interstates 40 and 85. These days, although downtown is basking in the dust of three new office towers and umpteen parking decks, shopping is mostly limited to antiques.

Greensboro got its first glimpse of the mall in 1961, when award-winning architect Edward Durell Stone came to town to show the first architectural plans of a new shopping center named Four Seasons.

Stone promised it would be free of the “neon vulgarities” that characterized much of the architecture of the day. And he said the center would not house businesses out to “catch a penny and a quick buck. It will be a place of beauty, interest, and enjoyment”.

Stone’s plan was dumped in favor of a mall design and construction began in 1972, early enough to make it Greensboro’s first mall. Carolina Circle Mall followed two years later. Before long, even old textile mills were being converted to malls such as Cotton Mill Square.

Four Seasons owner Joseph Koury had wanted a three-story mall back in the early ‘60s but had trouble convincing folks it would work. When the mall was built in the early ‘70s, it included a third story that was used for storage. A third story of shops was opened in 1987 and Four Seasons Mall became Four Seasons Town Centre.

With its 175 stores, 23 restaurants, and four movie screens, Four Seasons has become Greensboro’s shopping and entertainment hub.

“We’re really a town within a town,” says Linda Jones, marketing director for Koury Corp. “We have everything you need here from a post office to a drivers’ license office.

And the mall is still growing. Koury plans to eventually connect the mall and its sister Four Seasons Holiday Inn. The proposed 30-story hotel tower would be the city’s tallest building.

Since it is an enclosed, climate-controlled bubble, the mall frees shoppers from the weather. Despite its name, Four Seasons is seasonless, always bright with plants growing year round.

In the summer, shoppers come to escape heat and humidity. In the winter, teens can check each other out without the cocoons of heavy coats. Every morning, legions of mall walkers stomp through the windless, rainless corridors without dirtying their shoes.

Climate control has helped the mall knock off its predecessor, the shopping center, as the dominant facet of suburban culture.

Shopping centers were born out of the car culture of the post-World War II era. As Mom and Dad were busy procreating and moving to the suburbs, they began purchasing automobiles in record numbers.

Meanwhile, television advertisements showcased the spoils of the post-war boom. But in burgeoning suburbia, there weren’t enough places to buy such wonders as vacuum cleaners, lava lamps, and polyester suits.

The shopping center, and eventually the mall, completed the link between television and the highway. As major department stores and national chains moved to the suburbs, shoppers had no trouble finding right in their own neighborhood everything they’d seen advertised on television.

Friendly Shopping Center was born in 1953 when it was just outside the city limits.

In the beginning, Friendly was to be a modest project designed to look like a Williamsburg Village. It grew through the ‘60s and early ‘70s as downtown department stores followed customers to the suburbs. Forum VI, a small mall with exclusive shops and restaurants, was added to the Friendly complex in 1975.

Even as it grew, Friendly retained a neighborhood shopping center feel that lived up to its name. Free from the fake ambience and overwhelming structure of the mall, it’s still a place where you can run into neighbors at their cars and meet friends for a quick cup of coffee.

It also is a unique retail hybrid that blends the outside and inside, the car and the pedestrian, the mom-and-pop stores of downtown and the national chains of the mall.

But Friendly’s days as a shopping center may be numbered.

Friendy’s owners, the Starmount Company, have said chances are good the shopping center will be made into a mall beginning in 1992. The conversion would come in several phases. In each phase some of the existing buildings would be torn down and parking lots ripped u, replaced by a mall section.

“The years are taking their toll, and it is becoming obsolete,” says Elvin Parks, president of Starmount. “We must do whatever it takes to keep this a top scale center”.

A mall would allow for more stores and more diversity for shoppers. But it won’t be as easy for shoppers to pull up to the store they want, dash in and out in a few minutes. Malls keep shoppers contained, forcing them to walk around more and, merchants hope, purchase more.

What about shoppers who aren’t mall friendly?

One hopeful sign for them is the rebirth of open-air markets. At Greensboro’s Quaker Village, for example, a remarkable unmalling happened recently when the developer pulled the roof of the mini-mall and returned it to an open air center.

Mall loathers also have to ally themselves with the shopping center. These strip centers, with their grocery stores, video rental shops, and hair salons, continue to draw shoppers in search of everything from garden hoses to styling mousse.

What shopping centers lack in beauty, they make up for in honesty. While a few try to pass themselves off as quaint towns in concrete clothing, most simply get people in and out quickly with no-nonsense style.

And then there’s downtown. A few civic leaders are tossing around a new idea they say would be just the thing to reinvigorate downtown.

They want to build a mall.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

The Mall of Memphis.org

I was doing some web surfing today and came across a website that is very much related to http://mallmemories.com.

It's a website fully dedicated to the Mall of Memphis. I still don't know what city that mall was located in. I was just kidding by the way.

Run by Doug Force, Mall of Memphis.org could be thought of as the equivalent of Carolina Circle Mall's Home of Carolina Circle Mall and Carolina Circle City.

I haven't really had much time to do a thorough examination of the website, but from what I've seen, it's awesome.

I believe in the same philosophy. People have always asked me why I love Carolina Circle Mall so much and why I even bother having a website/blog about it. Here's the answer. Carolina Circle Mall wasn't just an Ice Rink/Carousel haven full of stores, it was Memoryville, North Carolina! Mall of Memphis is Memoryville, Tennessee.

Carolina Circle City salutes Mall of Memphis, Mall of Memphis.org, and Doug Force.

Oh yeah, click here to visit the Mall of Memphis.

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Will it Die or Not?

I've been on this earth for 16 years and I've been around long enough to soak up some good info on malls.

With this info, I can now easily determine if a certain mall will close. Unfortunately when Carolina Circle Mall was open, I didn't have a good sense and I actually thought that Carolina Circle was going to be around forever. The biggest mistake was when it closed. I didn't take any pictures of the inside so I now have to rely on the Internet.

More recently when my school Pendle Hill Christian School became a "Dead School", the last day I took a lot of pictures and video. I learned from my mistake at Carolina Circle.

Anyway, we are going to look at local malls and see if it is dying or not.

Four Seasons Town Centre: This mall opened in 1975 one year before Carolina Circle did. So it pretty much shares the same generation with Carolina Circle. However, the theory "Only the Good Die Young" reared its ugly head in 2002 when Carolina Circle closed. Today, the mall is thriving and shows no sign of doom. It's always packed whenever I go there and it seems like you always have to park in Panama.

Hanes Mall: This mall opened the same year Four Seasons opened. In 1990, they opened their new South Mall. Earlier this decade, they did a complete renovation including a new carousel. But in the mid 90's, the mall included a Camelot Music and a dollar store side by side just like at Carolina Circle. Add that to the new carousel and you get one of two Next Generation Carolina Circles. As for the "Dying", it shows no sign of doom except for the Hecht's corridor that concerns me.

Oak Hollow Mall: This is a fairly new mall. I think it opened sometime around 1996. Anyway, I really think this is the ultimate New Carolina Circle Mall. Why? It has a similar color scheme, I think a carousel, and a similar food court shape. I only go there about once a year so I don't really know its condition. I'm assuming it's good to go.

Burlington Square Mall: This opened around 1969 or the early 70's. It's had 3 names: Holly Hill Mall, Colonial Burlington Mall, and Burlington Square Mall. I'm actually a little bit concerned about this mall. Not many people go there, a few stores are gone, and there is only one restaurant open at the food court. We'll have to keep a good eye on this one.

Pennrose Mall: Ho boy. Hello next Carolina Circle. I'm surprised that this mall's still open. I've been there a handfull of times and my last trip was about 10 years ago. The JC Penny is gone leaving Belk and Rose's. I hear it hasn't changed since I last went though.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Other Victims

Carolina Circle Mall isn't the only mall that's gone down the drain. There are other malls that have also suffered the same fate.

Dead Malls.com features many other dead malls for your viewing pleasure. Even though they don't have an article about Carolina Circle, it's still neat to read.

By the way, I like to call dead malls "Carolina Circles".

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Carolina Circle Mall Versus Four Seasons Mall

Greensboro's malls can easily be described in road terms. Carolina Circle Mall was Interstate 40 and Four Seasons Mall is Interstate 85. But which one was the better one? I will now talk about a few things I like about each mall.

Why I Like Carolina Circle Mall: It was very homey and comfortable. It included the only ice rink and/or carousel in Greensboro. Well, that's excluding the cheap mini carousels outside of K-Mart. It just had that certain comfort feal that most malls of today don't have.

Why I Like Four Seasons Mall: It's the only mall I've every been to that has 3 floors. It also has that elegant feal to it. I don't have much to say on this but I describe it more at Four Seasons City. :)

But if I had the chance to go to either Four Seasons or Carolina Circle I'd definately of course choose Carolina Circle. Four Seasons has gone through a trendy modernization the past 10 years. That's alright, but maybe it's because I'm more retro than contemporary. If Carolina Circle was still opened, it would probably be just as contemporary as Four Seasons. It's also amazing to see that both malls are about the same age. Four Seasons opened in 1975 and Carolina Circle opened in 1976. Oh well. Only the good die young.

Here's a list of every mall and major shopping center that's been in Greensboro:

Still Open:

Four Seasons Mall
Friendly Center

Closed:

Carolina Circle Mall
Forum VI
Cotton Mill Square

Sunday, September 18, 2005

Meet the Family

Believe it or not, there are many more malls that are similar to Carolina Circle Mall. I've heard a few but I have mine. That mall would be Hanes Mall in Winston-Salem. Why?

1. They both have had a carousel at one time.

2. Hanes Mall once had an Everything's a Dollar store and a Camelot Music side by side exactly like at Carolina Circle.

3. They both smell similar.

4. They both have a similar rectangular shape.

5. Both have a Belk's and Dillard's.

6. Both have had a Annabell's.