Rolling Acres shopping mall in Akron, Ohio. Photograph: Seph
Lawless
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The death of the American mall
Once-proud visions of
suburban utopia are left to rot as online shopping and the resurgence of city
centres make malls increasingly irrelevant to young people
• Why does anyone still live in Detroit?
David Uberti
Thursday 19 June 2014 11.02 BST / http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2014/jun/19/-sp-death-of-the-american-shopping-mall?CMP=fb_gu
It is hard to believe there has ever been any life in this
place. Shattered glass crunches under Seph Lawless’s feet as he strides through
its dreary corridors. Overhead lights attached to ripped-out electrical wires
hang suspended in the stale air and fading wallpaper peels off the walls like
dead skin.
Lawless sidesteps debris as he passes from plot to plot in
this retail graveyard called Rolling Acres Mall in Akron, Ohio. The shopping
centre closed in 2008, and its largest retailers, which had tried to make it as
standalone stores, emptied out by the end of last year. When Lawless stops to
overlook a two-storey opening near the mall’s once-bustling core, only an
occasional drop of water, dribbling through missing ceiling tiles, breaks the
silence.
“You came, you shopped, you dressed nice – you went to the
mall. That’s what people did,” says Lawless, a pseudonymous photographer who
grew up in a suburb of nearby Cleveland. “It was very consumer-driven and kind
of had an ugly side, but there was something beautiful about it. There was
something there.”
Gazing down at the motionless escalators, dead plants and
empty benches below, he adds: “It’s still beautiful, though. It’s almost like
ancient ruins.”
Rolling Acres shopping mall. Photograph: Seph Lawless
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Dying shopping malls are speckled across the United States,
often in middle-class suburbs wrestling with socioeconomic shifts. Some, like
Rolling Acres, have already succumbed. Estimates on the share that might close
or be repurposed in coming decades range from 15 to 50%. Americans are
returning downtown; online shopping is taking a 6% bite out of brick-and-mortar
sales; and to many iPhone-clutching, city-dwelling and frequently jobless young
people, the culture that spawned satire like Mallrats seems increasingly dated,
even cartoonish.
According to longtime retail consultant Howard Davidowitz,
numerous midmarket malls, many of them born during the country’s suburban
explosion after the second world war, could very well share Rolling Acres’
fate. “They’re going, going, gone,” Davidowitz says. “They’re trying to change;
they’re trying to get different kinds of anchors, discount stores … [But]
what’s going on is the customers don’t have the fucking money. That’s it. This
isn’t rocket science.”
Shopping culture follows housing culture. Sprawling malls
were therefore a natural product of the postwar era, as Americans with cars and
fat wallets sprawled to the suburbs. They were thrown up at a furious pace as
shoppers fled cities, peaking at a few hundred per year at one point in the
1980s, according to Paco Underhill, an environmental psychologist and author of
Call of the Mall: The Geography of Shopping. Though construction has since
tapered off, developers left a mall overstock in their wake.
Most of the windows in Rolling Acres shopping mall have been
smashed. Photograph: Seph Lawless
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Currently, the US contains around 1,500 of the expansive
“malls” of suburban consumer lore. Most share a handful of bland features.
Brick exoskeletons usually contain two storeys of inward-facing stores
separated by tile walkways. Food courts serve mediocre pizza. Parking lots are
big enough to easily misplace a car. And to anchor them economically, malls
typically depend on department stores: huge vendors offering a variety of
products across interconnected sections.
For mid-century Americans, these gleaming marketplaces
provided an almost utopian alternative to the urban commercial district, an
artificial downtown with less crime and fewer vermin. As Joan Didion wrote in
1979, malls became “cities in which no one lives but everyone consumes”.
Peppered throughout disconnected suburbs, they were a place to see and be seen,
something shoppers have craved since the days of the Greek agora. And they
quickly matured into a self-contained ecosystem, with their own species – mall
rats, mall cops, mall walkers – and an annual feeding frenzy known as Black
Friday.
Rolling Acres' picnic place. Photograph: Seph Lawless
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“Local governments had never dealt with this sort of
development and were basically bamboozled [by developers],” Underhill says of
the mall planning process. “In contrast to Europe, where shopping malls are
much more a product of public-private negotiation and funding, here in the US
most were built under what I call ‘cowboy conditions’.”
Shopping centres in Europe might contain grocery stores or
childcare centres, while those in Japan are often built around mass transit.
But the suburban American variety is hard to get to and sells “apparel and
gifts and damn little else”, Underhill says.
Nearly 700 shopping centres are “super-regional” megamalls,
retail leviathans usually of at least 1 million square feet and upward of 80
stores. Megamalls typically outperform their 800 slightly smaller, “regional”
counterparts, though size and financial health don’t overlap entirely. It’s
clearer, however, that luxury malls in affluent areas are increasingly forcing
the others to fight for scraps. Strip malls – up to a few dozen tenants
conveniently lined along a major traffic artery – are retail’s bottom feeders
and so well-suited to the new environment. But midmarket shopping centres have
begun dying off alongside the middle class that once supported them. Regional
malls have suffered at least three straight years of declining profit per
square foot, according to the International Council of Shopping Centres (ICSC).
The trend is especially noticeable in the Midwest, a former
blue-collar bastion where ailing malls have begun dotting suburban landscapes.
Outside of Chicago, Lakehurst Mall was levelled in 2004 and the half-vacant
Lincoln Mall is costing its host village millions in botched redevelopment
plans. Dixie Square Mall sat vacant for more than 30 years after serving as the
backdrop for the iconic chase scene in the 1980 film The Blues Brothers. It was
finally demolished in 2012. Many others will similarly lie dormant as they wait
for the wrecking ball.
These hulking monuments to American consumer culture make up
the subject of Lawless' book Black Friday. The work includes photographs from
Randall Park Mall, a Cleveland-area shopping centre being demolished after five
years of vacancy, and Rolling Acres, to which the tattooed, mohawk-sporting
photographer returned in late May.
The North Randall Mall. Photograph: Seph Lawless
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Vandals have left none of the mall’s glass storefronts in
tact – “kids coming in and breaking shit,” Lawless explains. Shattered
skylights allow rain to fall inside and douse the musty hallways. Coupons
offering $10 off at Radioshack, a retailer that announced the closure of up to
1,100 stores last year, are still scattered about the tile floors.
Built in 1975, when times were good, Rolling Acres and its
1.2 million square feet once boasted 140 stores. “All of Akron shopped at the
megamall,” the Cleveland Plain-Dealer recalled. “Gone are the glory days.” A
man was electrocuted in 2011 when trying to steal copper piping from the
structure, and the body of a serial killer victim was found in a shallow grave
behind the mall that same year.
The shopping centre sits on the nondescript outskirts of
Akron, a shrinking city of 200,000 that’s a short drive south of Cleveland.
Dubbed the “Rubber Capital of the World”, it hosted much of the country’s tire
manufacturing industry in the 20th century. But it has faced economic hardship
and a 30% drop in population over the past 50 years, just as nearby Cleveland
took an even deeper plunge.
Formerly home to a slew of big-box stores, the area
surrounding Rolling Acres has more recently attracted discount shops, storage
warehouses and a recycling centre. The structure itself is drowning in a sea of
cracked and fading asphalt, a parking lot that looks naked without the
thousands of cars for which it was paved
“Everyone has good memories of the malls. It was a happier
time, essentially,” Lawless says over lunch in Cleveland, whose Arcade shopping
centre downtown fell into foreclosure after the financial crisis. Initiatives
to improve feeble malls often prove palliative, he adds, “because it’s about
the communities, not just the malls.”
The food court in the North Randall Mall. Photograph: Seph
Lawless
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Various estimates project dozens to hundreds of struggling
US shopping centres will close in the next 20 years. It’s the “natural
lifecycle of any business”, says Jesse Tron, a spokesman for the ICSC trade
group. And it often mirrors the natural lifecycle of the surrounding community.
“Demographics dry up,” he says. “Everyone felt the effects of the recession,
but some places felt it far more than others. Does it mean that it’s difficult
for retail to come back [there]? Yes. Does it mean that it won’t come back?
No.”
Leaders in many towns that once fought for malls now grapple
with how to inter their remains. Highland Mall in Austin, Texas, is being
converted into a community college campus, and Lakeland Mall in Florida now
houses a megachurch. Others have been redeveloped to include housing, offices
and even green space. But it’s hard to envision many ageing malls, especially
those in the Rust Belt, mustering demand for such transformations.
Driving past Northland Centre in Southfield, Michigan,
unfamiliar passersby would have been hard-pressed to judge whether the mall had
a pulse on recent afternoons. Located just past Detroit’s racially charged
border at Eight Mile Road, the shopping centre opened to great fanfare in 1954.
A New York Times article the next year estimated that it attracted 30,000 daily
carloads of shoppers who “stroll about and window-shop just as they do on Fifth
Avenue in New York”. The mall “created a new downtown”, the piece concluded.
That may be true, but not without helping destroy another.
Some locals today point to Northland as the symbolic beginning of the end, an
emblem of the postwar sprawl that gradually decimated Detroit. Indeed, the
shopping centre heralded a new wave of malls in nearby suburbs – a dozen were
built in southeast Michigan over the next 20 years. They drew consumers away
from downtown shops like Hudson’s, once the second-largest department store in
the world. The 410-foot titan was demolished in 1998, leaving young Detroiters
with a block-long expanse of concrete as the only clue to its former grandeur.
For middle-class white people who fled Detroit in the boom
years, Southfield was a prime destination: its population quadrupled between
1950 and 1980. But the well-off have continued sprawling to more distant
suburbs – a trend that accelerated after 2000 – and poorer Detroiters have
continued moving in to replace them. Northland Centre likewise stagnated; its
last major update came in the early 1990s. Only two anchor stores remain, with
the shell of another set to house a local church. Many local shoppers have
turned toward more lustrous megamalls in outer suburbs.
There used to be life in this place. It used to be where
families would go on Christmas Eve for last-minute holiday shopping. It used to
be where teenagers cutting class would dodge mall cops so they could pick up Dr
Dre’s latest single. And it used to be where young, middle-class Detroiters
like Betty Booth, wearing their Sunday best, would come for weekend outings.
“It was an all-day event,” says Booth, who was a teenager when the mall opened.
“This is where you met people.”
Booth is the president of the Northland Pacers, a
mall-walking club that gathers for morning exercise around the shopping
centre’s one-mile perimeter. The club reached nearly 1,000 members in the
1980s, even garnering sponsorships from retailers. But the Pacers have withered
alongside their namesake.
Northland was sold to a private real-estate investment
company in late 2008 for a reported $31m, just a hair over its construction
cost a half-century earlier. Though Northland’s occupancy hung near 70% at the
time, the new owners Ashkenazy Acquisition Corp saw “great potential” in the
mall, citing its location among a web of highways crisscrossing the densely
populated metro area. But hope for the impending renovations has since dimmed.
Five years after the sale, the management has yet to release any plans for
Northland, and did not respond to a request for comment.
The mall’s structure, meanwhile, is growing increasingly
antiquated. Its monstrous parking lots are crumbling. And its three- or
four-level anchor stores have proven less viable than they once were, according
to Terry Croad, Southfield’s director of planning. “The new owner has a good
track record. They’ve got a portfolio with some big-ticket projects that are
more in that lifestyle, pedestrian-oriented, indoor-outdoor sweet spot … But we
haven’t seen much movement on their part here.”
And it shows. Employees at Northland’s stores appear to
outnumber shoppers on a warm May afternoon, and Eminem’s Sing for the Moment
blares from overhead speakers and bounces off the worn floors. Many of the
mall’s tenants have departed over the years, leaving behind dark, vacant
storefronts sadly reminiscent of the once-proud city on the other side of Eight
Mile.
But Booth still arrives at Northland at 9:30 every morning
to meet friends, most of them elderly women, and hold court. They meet in the
food court, no less. For three or four hours, they share the latest news and
gossip, including occasional whispers that the mall might close. “We always
hear rumours about it happening, and it always scares us,” she says.
Those rumours may be premature. There are no immediate plans
to close Northland. But factors that could ease any sort of recovery seem
unlikely to improve. While Detroit is no longer in socioeconomic free-fall, it
has entered a prolonged slump with no end in sight. The same goes for many
nearby suburbs that likewise relied on the motor industry. Five megamalls sit
within a 45-minute drive of Southfield – all at least 20 years Northland’s
junior – in addition to several smaller competitors. Violence in the shopping
centre won’t help matters. One patron died this year while fighting security
guards.
Such signs only fuel Booth’s worries. Sipping coffee at a
long line of tables surrounded by unlit shops, empty restaurants and the
painted-over entrance to a former anchor store, she addresses most people who
pass by name. Booth came of age when Americans went to malls not only to buy
things, but also to shop. The pastime had its own peculiar type of social
value, helping friends and strangers alike stay connected before the days of
the internet.
Booth still needs that connection. She hesitates to walk in
her northwest Detroit neighbourhood due to safety concerns. And while the
city’s inner core has seen a modest revitalisation in recent years, it’s driven
by young professionals of a social breed far different than hers. For Booth,
Northland is still downtown, and the linoleum jungle is home. The mere mention
of adapting to a new environment makes the 75-year-old shake her head.
“If this mall closed, I don’t know where we would go,” she
says. “Where would we go?... This is where I meet my friends. We’ve been
sitting here all these years, all in the same spot.”
Liz Abrom, a former president of the Northland Pacers who’s
next to Booth and wearing a t-shirt emblazoned with their group’s name, adds:
“This was Detroit’s mall. And over the years, a lot of people picked up and
left the city. The same thing happened to the mall.”
David Uberti is a writer based in New York. Follow him on
Twitter @DavidUberti
Black Friday: the Collapse of the American Shopping Mall, by
Seth Lawless, is available in
http://www.sephlawless-shop.com/product/black-friday-the-collapse-of-the-american-shopping-mall-2014
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