The Mall of the Future | Street Fight (2024)

The Mall of the Future | Street Fight (1)

by Nancy A Shenker

The media love to show pictures of vacant and deteriorating malls. But the reality is that the mall isn’t dying. It’s just changing.

Let’s think back to 1992 when The Mall of America opened and became a destination — not just for shopping but for dining and playing. It’s now a major tourist attraction and is visited annually by 40 million people.

In many ways, that model may be the future of the shopping mall (but on a smaller scale).

Eatertainment and sportsainment (including massive pickleball centers) are proliferating, and some anchor stores are seeking out different models (like micro-stores or stores-within-stores) or closing completely.

A comprehensive research study was done by Coresight earlier this year and revealed that the American mall is not dead.

In fact, traffic is up 12 percent at top-tier malls, and occupancy is at 95 percent post-pandemic.

But these complexes are becoming a smaller part of the retail footprint.

And those malls that are thriving are adopting a Mall of America model and creating fully immersive and unique experiences for the people who pass through them.

In warmer climates, outdoor shopping centers feature Instagram areas, splash pads for kids, and concerts and community activities.

With some retailers vacating the indoor mall, developers are filling spaces with a wide range of useful consumer and business services — from high-tech medical offices to co-working spaces and even tailoring shops.

And, of course, malls are becoming entertainment centers for the entire family, with movie theaters, play spaces, and rotating exhibits.

When older malls are torn down, they are sometimes replaced by multi-use complexes that house everything from apartments and hotels to entertainment centers, gyms, and shopping. Living “inside the mall” is becoming a trend. It has an environmental benefit too, in that products and services can be within walking distance.

The fully integrated mall means that management must plan and execute new marketing approaches to:

  • Build community, driving traffic to malls for reasons other than shopping
  • Utilize their real estate to serve as both shopping spaces and marketing billboards. We’ve already talked about the shrinking footprint for some retailers and the square footage that’s not being used for inventory can be put into action to encourage online shopping
  • Ensure that their search marketing is driving consumers to their location. The old-school mall directory is as dated as a paper map. Some mall operators have even integrated specific product searches within their listings. Keeping people inside the mall longer (and boosting average spend) is the ultimate goal.

That vacant space where a 1960s mall once stood may not be empty for long.

It’ll just be different.

The Mall of the Future | Street Fight (2)

Nancy A Shenker, senior editor with Street Fight, is a former big brand (Citibank, Mastercard, Reed Exhibitions) marketing strategist and leader. She has been featured in Inc.com, the New York Times and Forbes.

The Mall of the Future | Street Fight (2024)

FAQs

Why are so many malls abandoned? ›

Changes in the retail climate

Structural changes in the department-store industry have also made survival of these malls difficult. These changes have contributed to some areas or suburbs having insufficient traditional department stores to fill all the existing larger-lease-area anchor spaces.

Is the Mall of America still thriving? ›

But the reality is that the mall isn't dying. It's just changing. Let's think back to 1992 when The Mall of America opened and became a destination — not just for shopping but for dining and playing. It's now a major tourist attraction and is visited annually by 40 million people.

What is the world's largest mall? ›

The New South China Mall in Dongguan, China, is the largest mall globally, covering a vast 6.46 million sq ft of leasable space.

Why are malls called malls? ›

The term “mall,” Lange explains, takes its origins from London's Pall Mall street, a “long, linear course, really an alley, at the heart of the city” that was used to play an early version of croquet called pall-mall.

What killed the malls in America? ›

Much has been written on the phenomenon of the collapse of the American mall and the reasons for it. The most obvious—the rise of online retail—is undeniably a significant factor, but it also masks a rot that had been spreading before Amazon gutted brick-and-mortar.

How many malls have died? ›

The decline of the American mall has left just 700 still standing. Soon there may be just 150 left. There may be just 150 malls left in the US in 10 years, according to one industry watcher. There are currently around 700 malls in the US, down from 2,500 in the 1980s.

Is there a mall bigger than Mall of America? ›

Del Amo Fashion Center

Located outside of Los Angeles in Torrance, California, Del Amo Fashion Center mall clocks in at over 2.5 million square feet.

Why do Americans say mall? ›

The term "mall" originally meant a place where people played pall-mall, a game similar to croquet. ... During the 1800s, it was sometimes called a "mall" but also just "the public grounds." The term "Mall" became the accepted name in the 1900s. In 1902, the McMillan plan officially described it as "The National Mall."

Who invented The Mall? ›

Because he invented the modern mall, Malcolm Gladwell, writing in The New Yorker, suggested that "Victor Gruen may well have been the most influential architect of the twentieth century." Until the mid-1970s, his office designed over fifty shopping malls in the United States.

What do the English call a mall? ›

A mall or shopping mall (called a shopping centre in Britain) is a very large building (or group of buildings) that contains a large number of stores and restaurants, sometimes a movie theater, and usually has plenty of space outside for parking: Sarah likes to hang out at the mall with her friends.

Why are malls unpopular now? ›

The Retail Apocalypse

The decline in mall popularity over the years can be attributed to several significant factors, including: Changing consumer preferences, including the rise in e-commerce giants like Amazon and the convenience of shopping online. The growth in alternative shopping and entertainment options.

Will malls ever make a comeback? ›

#1 Mall visits are returning to pre-COVID levels.

Although foot traffic to shopping centers took a hit over the pandemic, analyzing visit trends from the past couple of years reveals that most types of malls are seeing their visits slowly but surely return to their pre-COVID baseline.

Why are malls closing in usa? ›

According to a 2023 Jones Lang LaSalle report, mall vacancies are at their highest levels in the past 15 years, exacerbated by COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, the proliferation of online shopping, and closures and bankruptcies among popular mall retailers and major department stores that have historically anchored the ...

What is the largest abandoned mall? ›

With eerie empty cinemas, and escalators frozen in time, the Randall Park Mall is a far cry from what it once was. Measuring nearly 2.2million square feet, the huge mall was supposed to be the future of retail in Ohio, US when it was opened on August 11, 1976.

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