Date post: | 14-Apr-2017 |
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Is the mall really
DEAD?
Since 2010, more than two dozen enclosed shopping malls have closed.
Source: Green Street Advisors
But why?
Some say demographics and changing shopping habits have led to the mall’s demise
Some say ECOMMERCE is to blame
REALITY IS THAT LESS
THAN 10% OF GOODS ARE SOLD VIA ONLINE RETAILERS
Source: New York Times Jan 3, 2015
Online purchases
affect Big Box retailers more.
These stores are generally not in malls.
Malls are more affected by BEING overly saturated with too many of the same stores.
Conclusion?
A glut
of retail
is one cause for mall failures.
A pie can only be sliced so much!
Or the mall simply failed to ADJUST to the changing market
So what’s happening? How does one go….
FROM THIS To THIS >>>
Some malls have declined due to the consolidation of anchor tenants
IN 1990, ANCHORS LIKE RICH’S, BLOOMINGDALES, MARSHALL FIELDS, HUDSON'S, DAYTON'S AND MACY’S WOULD FIGHT OVER SPACE IN MALLS.
Some malls have declined due to the consolidation of anchor tenants
That’s not the case today.
Macy’s BOUGHT them all!
Bloomingdales
Marshall Fields Hudson's
Dayton's
Rich’s
? So what’s the bottom line
Not all MALLS are dead and NOT ALL malls are going away
Malls have never been entirely about BUYING
The first mall in the US was not created by a merchant, but by a sociologist!
Victor Gruen understood the need to create a centralized community to battle the American suburb of cul-de-sacs, clubs and carpools.
Victor Gruen understood the need to create a centralized community to battle the American suburb of cul-de-sacs, clubs and carpools
People want to be with other people….
Gruen understood this basic need and he created a way for that to be possible…..20th century-style
People have been coming together to formally socialize since at least the
10th Century B.C..
The Census Bureau estimates there will be more than 88 million people over 65
in America by 2050, more than twice the current figure.
That alone gives modern malls a core customer base.
another reason…
That’s a lot of mall walkers!
Just one more reason….
According to data released by the International Council of Shopping Centers,
occupancy rates increased, the highest since the throes of the recession,
in second-quarter 2008.
End of 2014,
mall occupancy UP
sales per sq ft UP The BEST since 1987
Source: Retailing Today
This is worth repeating….
End of 2014,
mall occupancy was 94.2% -
The BEST since 1987
Source: Retailing Today
Like malls, there’s lots of office buildings….
Let’s compare Mall OCCUPANCY to office buildings –
end of 2014
Office occupancy
83.2% Mall occupancy
94.2%
Both are types of real estate
WE DON’T HEAR PEOPLE
SHOUTING THAT OFFICE
BUILDINGS ARE DEAD!
Only 3.4% of all malls are considered “dead”
40% OR MORE VACANT (CONSIDERED DYING)
20% - 40% VACANT (CONSIDERED UNHEALTHY)
10% TO 20% VACANT (CONSIDERED A SIGN OF
TROUBLE)
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
‘06 ‘07 ‘08 ‘09 ‘10 ‘11 ‘12 ‘13 ‘14
Source: New York Times Jan 3, 2015
CONSIDER THIS….
If 3.4% of all malls are dead,
96.6% ARE NOT!
80% OF THE 1,200 US MALLS ARE
CONSIDERED TO BE HEALTHY.
Many malls have vacancies under 10%
Source: CoStar
People are spending & most mall rents are on the rise…..
As much as 17%
What about Net Operating Income?
2014 Mall NOI was the HIGHEST year over year growth in 14 years!
Sales to increase 5% Earnings to top 8%
Wall Street Predicts mall owners will see…
Some malls have seen their market
change so quickly and drastically,
they will change
Or die a quick death….
Fledgling malls must reposition themselves to survive
Repositioning of Phipps Plaza, Atlanta, GA
Others will have to refine
themselves to meet the
changing market
“All malls can die without sensitivity to change “
-Gar Muse Principal, Retail Design
COOPER CARRY
reposition verb re·po·si·tion \ˌrē-pə-ˈzi-shən\
> to change the position of
> to revise the marketing strategy for
(a product or a company) so as to increase sales
RE
It seems like much of the mall repositioning is taking place in dense urban environments
Take Landmark Mall near Washington, DC for example
It seems like much of the mall repositioning is taking place in dense urban environments
Take Landmark Mall near Washington, DC for example
Landmark Mall is ADAPTING
It seems like much of the mall repositioning is taking place in dense urban environments
An empty food court CAN speak volumes
Built in 1965, the mall lost its luster and its owner suffered a financial crisis
Landmark Mall is ADAPTING
The mall is being repositioned by new owners to become more of an urban
mixed-use project.
Landmark Mall is ADAPTING
Some stores are demolished and apartments being added will increase local population.
The roof comes off.
Landmark Mall is ADAPTING Circulation is improved by reshaping and reorganizing the vertical circulation and making the entire space more walkable and appealing.
Repositioning required cooperation from many stakeholders
• Department stores
• Existing mall retail tenants
• Office tenants
• Government agencies
• Mall owners
Landmark Mall is ADAPTING
It required a
VISION with solutions
So far what have we learned?
So far what have we learned?
Malls die when they don’t adapt
So far what have we learned?
Malls die when they don’t adapt
Too much of the “same” retail hurts malls
Malls die when they don’t adapt
Too much of the “same” retail hurts malls
Rents are on the increase
So far what have we learned?
Malls die when they don’t adapt
Too much of the “same” retail hurts malls
Rents are on the increase
Sales are on the increase
So far what have we learned?
Malls die when they don’t adapt
Too much of the “same” retail hurts malls
Rents are on the increase
Sales are on the increase
Mall NOI is on the increase
So far what have we learned?
There’s still one nagging question.
What about…
There, we’ve put it out there!
How do they shop?
Not in malls.
Right?
Wrong!
Source: OpinionLab
Wrong! In a 2014 OpinionLab survey: • 85% of Millennials plan to head to the mall at least
once this summer • 60% say they will go at least once a month • Nearly half (48%) of Millennials rank browsing
different stores as their #1 reason to go to the mall • Only 1 in 10 Millennials says nothing would
motivate them to spend more time in the mall
Source: OpinionLab
Biggest shocker Millennials are the only generation that prefer the mall to shopping online (37% to 27%)
Source: OpinionLab
For Retailers Appealing To Millennials
"It's less about commerce first more about engaging the consumer
Source: Aria Hughes, an editor for the online trend forecaster WSGN
&
“The mall that’s dead
probably needed to be. “
-Angelo Carusi Principal, Retail Design
COOPER CARRY
Why.
“Because it did not (or would not) change to meet the needs of the consumer. For over 2,000 years people have sought venues in which to socially interact with others. Malls have, and always will, provide that forum and space. It’s innate in us, as human beings, to want to be around others. We have found in malls a way to socially interact while filling another basic need which is tending to the desires of the head, heart and stomach. What better way to do that than with a retail store, coffee shop or soothing water feature close by.”
-Angelo Carusi Principal, Retail Design
COOPER CARRY
To sum it up . . . . .
“Almost from their beginning, malls told stories. Shoppers, municipalities, tenants and even developers contributed to the fabric which when woven together resulted in dynamic places and spaces that became places to not just shop, but to gather. Not much has changed in the essence of the mall. What has, and always will change, is the demographics, shopping preferences and retail itself. This requires that malls change as part of the evolutionary process. It doesn’t necessarily mean that all malls are dead. It does, however, mean that all malls can die. It’s the mall’s sensitivity to change combined with the will to do so that will live on.”
-Gar Muse Principal, Retail Design
COOPER CARRY
Let’s start a conversation…
COOPER CARRY, 191 Peachtree Street NE, Suite 2400, Atlanta, GA, 30303, 404-237-2000
Angelo Carusi, AIA, LEED AP, CDP, CRX Principal – Retail Specialty Practice Group [email protected] 404-358-4815 - cell
Gar Muse, AIA Principal – Retail Specialty Practice Group
[email protected] 404-219-3895 - cell
Credit where credit is due:
• The Economics (and Nostalgia) of Dead Malls The New York Times, Jan. 3, 2015
• N. American REIT & Real Estate Research Reports, Green Street Advisors, 2015
• Victor Gruen and the Birth of the Shopping Mall, Labelscar, Aug. 22, 2012
•The De-Malling of America: What's Next for Hundreds of Outmoded Malls?,
CoStar, Oct. 3, 2012
•Opinion Lab: Fresh insight into millennials, malls & the future of the store,
March 30, 2014
•Retailing Today: Report: Malls not dead, far from it. March 30, 2015