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50 haunting photos of abandoned shopping malls around the US
50 haunting photos of abandoned shopping malls around the US
Jan 21, 2018, 19:55 IST
This is the Carousel Mall in San Bernardino, California, which closed in 2017. The mall had been hanging by a thread after it lost its two main anchors, Montgomery Ward and JC Penney, several years before.
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Euclid Square Mall in Ohio had a similar fate and shuttered in 2016.
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It was temporarily used by religious congregations who held services in old stores. In September 2017, Amazon announced plans to build a 1.7 million square foot fulfillment center in its place.
This upscale mall in White Flint Mall in Bethesda, Maryland, which was once home to a Bloomingdale's department store.
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Elizabeth Taylor reportedly shopped here.
But this wasn't enough to keep it going – it shuttered its doors in 2015.
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Photographer Seph Lawless has become famous for his photos of abandoned malls. Here, he captures Chicago's Lincoln mall, which closed in January of 2015.
In its heyday, the 700,000-square-foot mall had the capacity to host four anchor stores and 100 smaller shops.
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But in the month's before it closed, it was home to just 40 businesses.
In 2013, the mall's owner told The Chicago Tribune that the mall was losing $2 million a year.
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The same year, a court-ordered receiver was appointed to force the location to pay taxes and fines, as well as make necessary repairs.
The mall's tenants did not generate enough in rent to pay for the improvements or repairs, according to an attorney for the owner.
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The mall reportedly failed to make these changes, which included creating new exits to comply with fire codes and replacing electrical and air conditioning systems.
In November 2014, Cook County judge ordered the closure of the mall following the holiday shopping season.
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Photographer Seph Lawless also captured the Metro North Shopping Center in Kansas City, Missouri.
The mall opened in 1976 and covered over 1.2 million square feet, which housed more than 150 retailers.
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It was shut down in 2014.
Already, the interior looks like it's been deserted for decades.
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It's completely run down and leaking.
Lawless has said it was "by far the creepiest mall I've been in."
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Developers had planned to renovate the mall but the makeover was slated to cost $200 million – the plan was ditched in 2015.
The mall is now being demolished to make way for a new part-commercial, part-residential development.
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This mall in Randall Park Mall in Cleveland has been empty since 2009.
The site was bought by Amazon to be converted into a 800,000 square foot fulfillment center.
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Rolling Acre Mall in Ohio was once packed with visitors.
In 2008 it faced a similar fate to other struggling malls and shuttered its doors.
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JC Penney was once the anchor store of the mall, it even had its own auto center, which is pictured below.
After the mall closed, photographer Seph Lawless captured these photographs showed how this abandoned complex had been left to rot.
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The inside of the mall was covered with snow...
... and had been left to crumble.
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In June 2016, the city deemed it unsafe for locals, issued warnings for people to stay away, and increased police presence.
After several rounds through the bankruptcy courts, it was acquired by the city of Akron.
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Demolition began in May 2016.
These photos were taken of Cloverleaf Mall in Chesterfield, Virginia in 2011.
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This was the area's first large-scale, regional shopping center.
But it closed in 2008.
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Once a buzzing hub, the inside looked completely barren.
In 2011 the building was demolished.
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In its place, a Kroger supermarket was built on its former 28-acre site.
Hawthorne Plaza in California closed its doors in 1999.
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Since then its made for an appropriately spooky spot for filming.
Gone Girl, The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift, and Minority Report were filmed there.
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The mall was originally home to national department store chains such as JC Penney.
In total, the space was 900,000 square foot with a five-acre parking lot.
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Today, it is just a derelict shell...
...covered in graffiti.
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In 2016, drone enthusiasts transformed the space into a drone racing track, where users could race their remote control drones around the building while it was lit up in fluorescent lights.
But these pop-ups were short-lived. Later that year, the city agreed to demolish the building and is replacing it with a $500 million open-air development which includes a mix of stores, housing, and offices.
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Maple Hill Mall in Kalamazoo, Michigan was closed and demolished in 2004. It was rebuilt and transformed into the Maple Hill Pavilion, which is now home to Target and discount stores Marshalls and Dollar Tree.
Some of these mall closures are less recent. Dixie Square Mall in Chicago, which was once home to 60 different stores including JC Penney and Walgreens was left vacant for 33 years before being demolished in 2012.