Bring back a Hall of Fame. Plenty of parking. Put a little arena in it too.
Taste of the Tropics has done their part, as well.Andrew Dufresne said:
Manchu Wok been holding the food court down since the 90s
Based on Conn's only opening in half of the old Sears doors, it would appear so...but I'm not 100% sure.Captn_Ag05 said:
Will Murdoch's have access into the mall or just exterior doors? It doesn't help the mall's cause when people can't get into stores except from outside and then they can't go into the mall once in anchor stores without leaving the store.
Captn_Ag05 said:
No.
Rexter said:
They should just use the Macy's spot for the YMCA. If Mayor Moonbeam says it isn't good enough, then there isn't a need for a Y.
Andrew Dufresne said:
Post Oak Mall isn't what it once was, not even close, but it isn't as dead as many like to portray it as. It can still get busy at times.
wareagle044 said:Andrew Dufresne said:
Post Oak Mall isn't what it once was, not even close, but it isn't as dead as many like to portray it as. It can still get busy at times.
I was there today. It's pretty bad. Not very clean either.
CBL is broke, but even if they weren't, you can't just bring in tenants, the tenants have to want to be there and good tenants don't want to be in a 50 year old dying mall in secondary markets. About half of the malls in the US will be gone in 5-10 years, and the ones that remain will be high end ones located in major cities. Repurposing them is more expensive than the value that they create so developers do things like build a Century Square.Quote:
Part of the problem (a big problem, really) is CBL's lack of interest in maintenance or coaxing interesting tenants in, and a good part of the 2000s was spent raising rents and driving long-term tenants, including higher-end, local establishments out. Stores like Scripture Haven and Taste of the Tropics are last of a kind.
The other problem is demographics and demand. There's no reason to redevelop the mall as an outdoor center if there's the same low-end apartments around it (most malls that are redeveloped into high-end "districts" are in nice parts of town...otherwise it just gets torn down for Walmart and friends).
I think the city needs to step in and take a role in the mall. It bugs me how people here condemn the City of College Station for buying the Macy's building while Bryan engages in selling out parkland to developers.
I believe there are lease agreements for retail only in the mall (Don't quote me on that). It shouldn't just be repealed...I don't want to see anchor spaces leased by the university or some fly-by-night call center, but it needs something that's retail-adjacent (and integrated with the main mall).
CBL shirking their duties is a huge part of why the mall sucks. Printed directories got cut years ago, maintenance slipped, and overall they aren't keeping the mall to the same standards it was even in the early to mid-2000s.1939 said:CBL is broke, but even if they weren't, you can't just bring in tenants, the tenants have to want to be there and good tenants don't want to be in a 50 year old dying mall in secondary markets. About half of the malls in the US will be gone in 5-10 years, and the ones that remain will be high end ones located in major cities. Repurposing them is more expensive than the value that they create so developers do things like build a Century Square.Quote:
Part of the problem (a big problem, really) is CBL's lack of interest in maintenance or coaxing interesting tenants in, and a good part of the 2000s was spent raising rents and driving long-term tenants, including higher-end, local establishments out. Stores like Scripture Haven and Taste of the Tropics are last of a kind.
The other problem is demographics and demand. There's no reason to redevelop the mall as an outdoor center if there's the same low-end apartments around it (most malls that are redeveloped into high-end "districts" are in nice parts of town...otherwise it just gets torn down for Walmart and friends).
I think the city needs to step in and take a role in the mall. It bugs me how people here condemn the City of College Station for buying the Macy's building while Bryan engages in selling out parkland to developers.
I believe there are lease agreements for retail only in the mall (Don't quote me on that). It shouldn't just be repealed...I don't want to see anchor spaces leased by the university or some fly-by-night call center, but it needs something that's retail-adjacent (and integrated with the main mall).