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Mall makeover: Willow Lawn returns
to outdoor roots
by Rob Walker
For Virginia Business
September 2005
When it comes to mall makeovers,
what’s old is positively trendy. These days, developers
are building outdoor “lifestyle centers,”
and older enclosed malls, such as Richmond’s Willow
Lawn Shopping Center, are literally tearing off their
roofs to infuse sunshine, blue sky and the feeling of
a neighborly open-air shopping community. Willow Lawn’s
makeover will bring it full circle. It began as an outdoor
mall when it opened in 1956 as Richmond’s first
suburban shopping center.
The $15 million to $20 million project
planned by Rockville, Md.-based owner Federal Realty
Investment Trust will remove a portion of the roof
and
combine open and closed spaces to provide a shopping
experience that contrasts with the enclosed format
of
indoor malls — a huge sealed environment surrounded
by a sea of asphalt.
Most developers want the feeling
of an outdoor town square, says Nancy McCann, vice president
for marketing with Forest City Enterprises, one of the
nation’s leading shopping mall developers and
owner of Henrico County’s open-air Short Pump
Town Center. “They provide greater visibility”
for a different tenant mix that includes more restaurants,
cafes and entertainment spaces, she says. The combination
creates “a sense of community, a different experience,
almost a town square.”
Nationally, developers still are
building enclosed malls but at a substantially slower
pace while construction of open malls is increasing,
says Patrice Duker, media director for the International
Council of Shopping Centers.
Projects like Willow Lawn are re-energizing many older
shopping centers. “This gives them the opportunity
to shift their tenant mix to better serve a changing
community,” Duker says, “and it gives the
place a different atmosphere. They become more local,
more like an old downtown.”
At Willow Lawn, which Federal enclosed
shortly after buying it in the early 1980s, renovation
includes removal of a strip of shops and construction
of new facades on the busy Broad Street side to enhance
visibility and access. The center will maintain its
size — about 500,000 square feet.
Work on the project began this summer;
a grand opening is scheduled for next spring. The reconfigured
mall will retain most of its current tenants, including
the Barksdale Theatre, Old Navy and Tower Records, while
adding new national retailers and restaurants. “We
want daytime and nighttime populations here,”
says Wendy Seher, Federal’s director of anchor
leasing.
Older centers such as Willow Lawn
have struggled to retain market share with the arrival
of competition in more distant suburbs. But its close-in
location on West Broad Street and area demographics
— the average household income of nearby residents
was $55,140 a year in 2004 — bode well for its
future. “The demographics around us have made
this a pretty affluent urban area” with a large,
varied population, says Theresa Stenger, Willow Lawn’s
marketing director.
While trendy transformations help
prolong the life of older shopping centers, they strike
Charlottesville’s Bob Stroh as ironic since many
malls opened as outdoor venues in the first place. Stroh
is co-chair of Charlottesville’s Downtown Business
Association, which oversees that city’s outdoor
Downtown Mall. “We can show you some real bricks
and real old buildings here, and a real cannon,”
says Stroh of the mall that opened in 1975 when suburban
Fashion Square Mall sucked much of the life out of downtown.
Today, Stroh declares the Downtown
Mall a hard-earned success with a hotel at one end and
the new outdoor Charlottesville Pavilion at the other,
a covered entertainment venue. Other entertainment options
include an ice-skating rink and theaters. The best measure
of the mall’s success, says Stroh, is in the expanding
residential development. “It was a battle to get
this working but now we can show you a great, authentic
downtown experience.”
Federal has other mall redevelopment
projects under way, mostly in Northern Virginia. At
Mount Vernon Plaza in Fairfax, the company is investing
$30 million to unify two older centers along the booming
U.S. 1 corridor to create an open, pedestrian-friendly,
mixed-use mall. The company, with partners, also has
redevelopment projects in Shirlington Village and Arlington
that will combine retail and offices, as well as theaters
and libraries.
Another growing trend in shopping
mall development is the addition of apartments and condominiums
in and around shopping centers. Willow Lawn’s
renovation doesn’t include residential units,
because it’s located near many neighborhoods offering
a variety of housing. Nationally, the trend is “growing
hugely,” says ICSC’s Duker. With rising
energy costs, shifts in lifestyle with more people wanting
to live near where they work and shop and limitations
on land availability, residential units are expected
to become more of a fixture near both old and new malls. |