Showing posts with label Georgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia. Show all posts

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Southlake Mall, Morrow

     The Southlake Mall, in Morrow, Georgia, a southside suburb of Atlanta, is doing far better than many will tell you. While it wasn't avoided by the "white flight" phenomena that deeply affected Atlanta, the people that too many suburbanites would call "unsavory" have taken the mall and led it to heights many malls would wish to see today. Too many people will also tell you that this mall is struggling, or that its been long dead and in need of revitalization. But this is very far from the truth. The mall that I saw on the Saturday evening I was there was one of hustle, bustle, and shopper-filled corridors of success. While there may have been some bumps on the road to where Southlake is today, the mall stands on a solid lineup, a loyal customer base, and an excited, energetic vibe that many malls fail to capture today.

We open this post with a view of straight outside Sears. Due to the busyness of the mall, I was unable to get a better angle here.

The Southlake Sears entrance may looks like every other Sears, all the way from the interior entrance to the customary closing signs.

The Sears/Food Court court is something to look at. On one hand, that carousel sign is awesome, and so is the tilework. But for such a large space, shouldn't there be some greenery, a fountain, or at least a eye-popping skylight for an otherwise bare roof?
     Southlake Mall opened its doors in 1976 with all the standard details of other Atlanta malls. National retailers Sears and JCPenney took up anchor spots along with homegrown Rich's and Davison's. Southlake Mall was the first major mall to be built on the deep southside of the city, and this distinction led to early success for the mall. This success was crucial for the mall to have, as only four years later the Shannon Mall was built ten miles away in Union City. But thankfully, the fast-growing pace of the southside allowed for two malls at the time, though obviously this pace couldn't keep on forever, and such a truth would cause potentially devastating reparations for the malls involved.

Sears court with my back to the Macy's-JCP area. For a cloudy evening, this mall was awfully bright, and I'm a fan of that for sure.

Looking down on the second floor towards H&M, with Macy's in the far background.

Macy's court. This is another place that could use more detail. For a mall whose layout forces it to not really have a center court, a centerpiece would help put a landmark in the mall. "The big, white Italian fountain" sounds much better than "Macy's court", ya feel?
     While two malls in a somewhat short distance from each other worked for a little while, competition would begin to get the best of one of the malls. Both malls' had their Davison's become Macy's in 1986, but the Macy's at Shannon Mall was bested by its nearby Southlake store and closed in 1999. This would be the beginning of the end of Shannon Mall, and with even more pressure from Arbor Place and Ashley Park, the mall closed in 2011 after years of decline. While seeing a mall get swept off the map is never a good sight, without Shannon's decline and the expansion of Southlake's trade area, who knows how Southlake would have fared in the recession. This turn of events definitely helped the mall, but even when the mall should have been thriving without flaw, major issues began to develop behind the scenes.

Looking back to the Sears wing with my back towards Macy's. The placement of that elevator seems really inconvenient, but I suppose you have to have one somewhere.

Here's the south entrance wing. I'm pretty sure this entrance is longer than the Macy's wing, which is worth noting. The stores down here are mainly the traditional nail and hair salons, though there's a GNC in this wing.

Macy's wing from the former JCP court. I can't say I hate the lights that hang from the railings, but doesn't it look quite silly?

The former JCPenney is covered by a mall advertisement on the second floor, while the first floor is a Forever 21. The second floor is occupied, but by Chime Solutions, a customer contact service. At least Chime could have done something with their storefront, like what Sykes did at Sumter Mall.

This massive Macy's caps off the mall on the east side. I gotta say that I do like the dual-entrance with the showing space in the middle. While you don't see these often, when Rich's designed the store, they used this design at a couple of other malls. On another note, the second floor of this store seemed absolutely huge to me. I swear this thing just kept going on.
     Throughout the early years of the mall's life, as suburbs would usually be, the area was primarily middle-class white. Because of this, the mall could have early success and was clear of demographic issues regarding the immediate area. But as Atlanta continued to move farther south with new suburbs, whites began to head with the wind, causing a phenomenon known as "white flight." Also, with the main economic engine in the neighborhood being that of industrial work, minorites picked up where the whites left, and with this shift came a definite shift at Southlake. While at that point the mall had been like any other suburban shopping center, the fact that some whites felt wary of visiting the area left a mark on the mall. The mall became more of the urban type, with mom-and-pop and urban wear stores taking over where chains left. Though with the population to support it, this change became a boon to the mall, and things picked up at the same pace as they normally would. If truly anything, this shift helped the mall, giving Southlake an edge and something different from the other Atlanta malls. And with issues still to come, Southlake would need this edge more than ever.

Aside from the addition of a food court in 1999, Southlake has never had a proper expansion. There's plenty of space to do one as well, though at this point I would have no idea who would fill up such a wing.

In front of Macy's on the first floor. Apparently, Skillz once had a store in Perimeter Mall, but I have no idea what it sells.

Looking back towards the former JCPenney/F21. Oddly enough, this wing seemed fairly dead compared to the Sears side. Obviously it wasn't that dead, but there was for sure a difference.

F21 from below. It's pretty dark down here, which is understandable.
     Yet, while all this was happening, Southlake had to deal with yet another concerning front : consolidation and anchor closings. While Davison's got the ball rolling in 1986 in becoming Macy's, the effects of this wouldn't come until some time later when in 2003, Rich's began the process of turning into Macy's. Macy's didn't want to keep two stores open, so while the Rich's became Macy's, Macy's moved out of the original Davison's and into the Rich's store. This effectively left one anchor closed, but more was yet to come. In 2011, JCPenney left the mall, giving Southlake two vacant and two full anchor slots. Fortunately, over the next couple of years, these vacancies would be refilled, with a conference center occupying the old Davison's and Chime Solutions, a customer contact company, filling in for JCPenney, It also got a small boost when Forever 21 occupied a section of the old JCPenney, and H&M also took up some space recently, helping round out a mall desperate for fashion anchors. While Southlake rolled successfully with a two-anchor look for a few years, another hit was taken when Sears announced their closure at the mall in June 2018. It is so far unknown on what will replace the store.

Looking forward to the bend in the mall's layout. Yeah, about that aforementioned fountain. This is one plain court.

Looking back into the Macy's corridor. Such a wide abyss of switching tile with so much potential to spice things up.

Sears court and food court entrance. You truly cannot tell the difference between the two main courts in this mall. I do however appreciate the carousel sign, you could call it gaudy but it's unique. Adds a little something.

They really squeezed the food court in here. I was unfortunately unable to take a photo of it though, as the number of people inside and the layout would have meant some tight angles.

Clear shot of the Sears corridor. One thing I have forgotten to say about this mall is how the kiosks are in non-intrusive places. They're still here, but I have seen some malls filled with kiosks in the court areas.

Detail of the carousel sign. Seems like for the majority of people it would have made sense to switch "food court" and "carousel" on the sign, but I guess it's a lot harder to make a fun food court sign. 
     While replacing the previous two closed anchors with non-retail entities was a successful move for the mall and helped it last through the past few years, whoever replaces Sears absolutely needs to be a proper anchor. I don't really have confidence in a discount store here as it wouldn't help the "urban" feel that the mall has been stuck to, and there's already a Roses, a Burlington, and a Fallas nearby. The only problem is that the options are deeply limited here. Anything more upscale than Macy's has nearly no chance of opening in the space. If Belk didn't open at Stonecrest when it had the opportunity, it isn't going in here. JCPenney is struggling, and somehow Dillard's doesn't feel right for the space or the mall as a whole. Owners will likely have to get a little unconventional to replace Sears. Yet, I think it's possible. Entertainment could be a boon for the mall, as the crowd could fit with it and the mall doesn't have anything to fit that bill yet. In my opinion, a reachable scenario for the mall could be having a large-scale entertainment complex on the first floor (think go-karts, bowling, arcade, etc.) and a grocery store on the second. Now, while a Kroger in a mall seems wild and right out of the 60's, Kroger did seriously toy with opening up in a section of the Cumberland Mall Sears a couple of years ago. Both of these replacements are pretty reliable and could bring a lot to this mall, so if I was the owners I would head off in that direction. An empty anchor doesn't help anyone.

Here's the only photo I was able to get of the food court. The design is at least somewhat close to Northlake Mall's food court.

Sears from the lower floor. Hardly remarkable.

View of the lower floor with Sears at my back. This is the last of the interior photos.
     Southlake Mall has always been resilient, though such a trait may be needed more than ever now. Southlake has nearly overcome everything through its lifetime, but today the mall must peel off the dead skin and begin a new era. However, the owners must make the correct moves here for success. In today's landscape, making a bad move can easily knock off a mall, and Southlake is in a vulnerable spot. Though long an underdog in the Atlanta shopping culture, these next years could make or break the 42 year-old mall.

Sears is made of boxes here. As far as I know, this is a somewhat unique design, though Sears has usually copy-and-pasted its designs elsewhere.

Sears from below. More of the boxy elements are shown here. 

JCPenney/Chime Solutions from afar.

Penney's is almost a mix of brutalist and modern here. I don't understand the look, but do I like it? Yes. In fact, I love it. There are some very plain stores that could use this (see below).

Rich's/Macy's was not so revolutional. While a plain store wasn't all that rare in the 70's, it looks out of place nowadays.


Macy's from afar.

Davison's/Morrow Center from afar. The only change that this store has ever seen was a repainting when the convention center moved in.

Main entrance from afar. This entrance really doesn't stick out for being the most important entrance.

Thursday, May 3, 2018

Lost in Time :: Galleria Specialty Mall, Smyrna

     If you bring up all the Atlanta area malls, one is likely to go unnoticed. One you probably did count was Smyrna's Cumberland Mall, but that's not what we are here for. What we are here for is a hidden gem of retailing. And this is a truly "hidden" gem. Nestled between a parking deck, a hotel, and under a convention center is a forgotten mall in the least likely of places. However, not only is this mall hidden, it's really a gem in an era where nearly every mall has either been demolished or been renovated a million times. Not only has the Galleria never been renovated, everything pretty much remains from the mall's opening date. It's all many of us have ever wanted in a mall, and then some. I hope you enjoy this absolute treat of a shopping center. What isn't to be enjoyed?

While the outside of the mall is pretty low-key and gives no clue to what's inside, the long-dead remaining Jocks and Jills to the left isn't giving off modern vides.

Detail of the old restaurant. Sorry for the finger in the bottom right corner.



     Information isn't easy to find on this mall, and that's not a good sign of the state of the mall. In fact, the mall seems to be missing a full history, which likely came from the fact that the mall floundered for a long time with little success. What is known is that the mall opened in 1983, a year after the connected Waverly Hotel opened next door. This seems believable enough given that the architecture looks the 80's part and has evidently and truthfully never been renovated. The mall opened up with a whopping zero anchors, but this somehow translated into success, albeit small (it was the 80's, so pretty much any mall was guaranteed to live for some time, no matter how bad they were). Unfortunately, this success was short-lived. All hope was lost when the Gwinnett Place duplicate Town Center at Cobb opened in 1986. The Galleria still is open and you can enter without fear of a trespassing charge. Let that sink in. The Galleria has been effectively dead for over three decades and still exists.

The inside of Jocks and Jills remains dirty with a TV still inside.

Looking back to the entrance from the inside of the mall.

A view from the second floor into the center court. You weren't expecting this, weren't you?


     With little care from locals or business owners, the Galleria went on a slow death from 1986. If a tree falls in a forest with no one around it to hear it, did it make a sound? That rang true with this mall, and owners basically threw in the towel in 1993, with the second floor being converted into a convention center. That convention center is still successful, and on the day of my visit there was a jewelry show on display for those in the industry. The owners must have thought this revitalization would bring some added SHINE, but the Galleria never became a DIAMOND in the rough and becoming the crown JEWEL of retail is hardly a dream at this point. I'll leave now like the stores that once lived in this vintage GEM. 

This mall may be small, but it does fit a lot in with this oddly-shaped layout. 

The odd shine from the wide skylights give so many 80's vibes in this photo and the mall as well that are so hard to explain. This would be from the lower level of center court with the food court to my left and the Jocks and Jills corridor to my southeastern angle.

This entrance wing once housed the previously mentioned Jocks and Jills as well as a Peter Glenn ski shop which would have been on the right. Say what you want about a ski shop in Atlanta but I shouldn't have to give clues on why that business failed.

The de-facto food court remains scenic despite all of the eateries that LEAFed it. 
     This all takes us to today, where a decaying corpse of a mall lies in a rather successful corridor of Cobb County. Unlike many other malls on this blog, I cannot create a plan to get this mall out of the dumps or keep it successful. The likely outcome here is that sometime in the next 5 years we will see what has been coming for a long. I'd imagine that the convention center is likely to expand into the mall, though even this idea hasn't been activated yet. It's been over three decades of hot debate, and nothing has been done so far. Is there any reason to believe change is in the air?

Developers definitely didn't hold off on the use of brick here. It creates a sort of "Main Street" feel to the storefronts, which is something that I like, no matter how old. Modern malls lack the character that places like these captured.

The occasional storefront still remains in the mall.

Decorative ivy adorns an otherwise plain balcony for the convention center. 


     While it's obvious that the Galleria at this point is pretty much obsolete and done for, there is still one thing that is nice about this mall. The architecture is one of a kind today, with the mall never being renovated as the others from its time were. Every other currently-existing Atlanta mall has been renovated, aside from the Galleria. This gives the dead mall an interesting niche, but one that is hardly sustainable. The everyday shopper wants clothes at the mall and not aging brick corridors. This mall has been brick corridors for too long to become relevant again. But if you did have a reason to head here, I will say that the design elements are worth a visit.



Walking through the food court leads you to a smaller court with a corridor to the Waverly Hotel and a corridor past the old theatre. While the central court was bright and open, this court is an exact opposite.

With a mall as unsuccessful and original as this one, it's highly likely that most or all of the storefronts are original. This green and yellow one is as interesting as it is old.

The theatre mallway may be empty but it's sure cool. The theatres occupied the large storefront to the right.
     While it may be grim, the Galleria was almost doomed to die from the start. Name any element of a successful mall, and the Galleria doesn't have it. Anchors? Unless you want to call a mid-sized movie theatre an anchor, there is nothing anchor-like at the mall. A hotel isn't an anchor as normal shoppers have no draw to go there and guests aren't going to enter the mall if nothing is there. A mall without anchors is like a ship without anchors; things may go well at first but you have no chance if you reach rough waters. But perhaps you will still shop here if its got a nice location, right? It took me at least ten minutes to get from the Cumberland food court to the parking deck, and that's before parking and entering the joint. Why should I go through the entire ordeal of getting here when there's a better mall across the street? And even if I'm coming from home, I still have to deal with exiting I-285 which can be problematic at any time of the day. This was exacerbated even further when SunTrust Park was built, destroying any decent part of getting here. I haven't even gotten to how much competition this mall has had to deal with, though that's partially just being unlucky. The part that isn't so lucky is how little ready the mall was for this. You can't stop other mall developers but you can renovate or expand. The developers didn't do anything, so it's hardly a surprise the mall is dead.

Even though its a fairly nice hotel, the hallway to it isn't so nice.

Quite possibly the coolest part of the mall is the long-closed AMC 8 Theatre. The theatre moved to a larger plex on Akers Mill and Cumberland Roads over a decade ago. There is still a faint labelscar on the entrance.

Oddly enough, the lights were on in the old theatre. Most fixtures still remain, which was a wonder to see. I can only imagine how the rest of the cinema looks, which wouldn't be too bad, based on what we see here.
     What is a "galleria" isn't showing much more than empty hopes and dreams down dank hallways. What the mall hasn't disappointed is the second part of its name. The mall is a specialty, though perhaps not in the way the original owners envisioned. Too bad filling a niche in retail doesn't equate to sustained success. If that was the opposite, this mall would be booming. But all that's booming today is only neon dreams and the malls that today reign supreme.