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- America's first mall is about to be redeveloped into offices, homes, and an NHL training center. We went inside and found it eerily empty.
America's first mall is about to be redeveloped into offices, homes, and an NHL training center. We went inside and found it eerily empty.
There was a strange, sewage-like smell in the eerily empty courtyard leading to the mall's entrance.
Its halls were built to handle a much larger volume of foot traffic than it receives these days.
Vacant storefronts were absolutely everywhere.
We saw a sign being stripped down from a shuttered, empty store.
Old Navy was still around, although it was running closing clearance specials.
Its estranged twin, Gap, fared no better.
Its windows and walls were littered with red sale signs.
The store appeared to simply be clearing out as much merchandise as possible.
That meant not just clothes ...
... but everything in the store, including fixtures and mannequins.
Signs on shuttered stores promised "More Style Coming Soon." However, the mall's redevelopment won't be completed until 2021, and then, it will no longer be a traditional mall.
The mall is not going without a fight. Recently added charging stations invite shoppers to stay longer.
There was even a futuristic Pokemon Center.
However, these well-intentioned methods of modernization have apparently done little to draw shoppers to the mall's stores.
Torrid was barely keeping its lights on.
And iconic soft pretzel vendor Wetzel's Pretzels didn't have any takers.
But, neither did Auntie Anne's.
Loft looked like a mausoleum.
And fast-fashion favorite Forever 21 remained devoid of fans despite a flurry of pink signs heralding massive markdowns.
Macy's has been the anchor store at Northgate since 1950, when it was still the Bon Marché.
Source: Seattle Pi
Now, Macy's plans to close its Northgate store this month, as soon as its lease expires.
Source: The Seattle Times
The store was in the process of purging all its contents.
The jewelry section was a a ghost town.
Signs everywhere advertised that the entire store was on sale, and staff members were nowhere to be seen.
The shoe section's racks had been cleared, and the remaining shoes were organized by size on display tables.
What was left of Macy's Home was on steep, steep discount.
But there wasn't much left.
Deeper into the store, the scenery was even more desolate.
Entire sections had been cleared out, and nothing remained except for the signs advertising the closing sales.
Walking through this Macy's felt like watching the final scene of "Friends," when the apartment we'd become so attached to over the years is emptied out, signaling the end of an era.
Across the way, Nordstrom was much more full of life. Nordstrom will transfer employees and merchandise to other area stores after this one closes.
Business was largely as usual as the store commenced its bi-yearly anniversary sale.
There was yellow tape signaling great deals — for Nordstrom club members only, of course.
The store's colorful displays were in full bloom.
And even though Topshop has officially left the US, it lives on forever (or at least for now) in the Nordstroms of our malls.
Even though Nordstrom plans to close the store in August, the cosmetics department will still go through with its bi-yearly beauty festival.
However, Nordstrom was definitely an exception.
Spencer's, once a temple for the edgy teen, has also jumped on the bandwagon of Northgate store closures.
A tip of the hat to whoever can guess what store this used to be.
Tween girl accessory hawker Claire's was still blindingly colorful and unnervingly peppy, much like the buy-three-get-three jewelry inside.
It looked like the photo booth hadn't seen any love since the '80s.
A Sarku's employee waited for stray passersby, holding a plastic tray of teriyaki chicken samples getting colder by the minute.
Although mostly empty, the food court was the most populated section of the mall.
There was a lot of competition for very few customers, but this was a Battle Royale with no winners.
Northgate Mall has served the middle class of north Seattle for over half a century. Soon, its doors will be closing forever.
Over the years, the mall has had to reinvent itself time and again to keep up with changing consumer trends and demographics. Will its new life as a mixed-use complex restore its profitability, or is it too late for the first mall in America?
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