To be snarky about it, one could suggest that visiting Lloyd Center is a good way to get out of the cold, rainy weather and to avoid the crush of holiday shopping crowds.
One year ago, a major real estate property development and management firm, Urban Renaissance Group, took control of the 18-square block mall and announced that it planned to keep it as a retail and community center with its skating rink in the middle.
Join the crowd |
There are a few new shops this season, including a magic
store and a purveyor of comic books. Other
low-voltage uses have included a film festival that ran for a few days in
vacant shops and a roller-skating event in one of the former big stores.
Ironically, the shopping complex that once floated Portland’s
retail boat may become the low-rent venue for “creative” new stores, much like
run-down neighborhood commercial streets once did. A key question facing Lloyd Center is whether
the new small shops can attract a sustainable customer base without the
attraction of large stores.
Security also will be
a challenge. Some retailers at Lloyd
Center have expressed concern about security from shoplifters. A few private security officers stroll around
periodically, and the large stores appear to provide their own.
----Fred Leeson
Join Building on History’s mailing list by writing “add me”
to fredleeson@hotmail.com
I predict the consumer public will reject the current mania for online/amazon/UPS shopping and will soon return to in-store shopping in full force. While in Palm Springs recently I heard a radio commercial for a furniture store. It featured a conversation between two millennial young women:
ReplyDeleteMillennial #1: "There is this "thing" in Palm Springs where you can actually go in person and see what you are buying. You can feel it, touch it, measure it, even sit in it before you buy it!
Millennial #2: Really?!! What's this "thing" called?".
Millennial #1: Its called a S-T-O-R-E.
Millennial #2. "A Store?? What a great idea! What will they think of next?
On addition to the undeniable practical appeal of a "store", we additionally have to contend now with increasingly sophisticated porch pirates.
Give it 5 years: Lloyd
Center will return to its former glory as a prime retail destination.