Westland Mall (Columbus)

Westland Mall
Location Columbus, Ohio
Coordinates 39°57′02″N 83°06′56″W / 39.9505556°N 83.1155556°W / 39.9505556; -83.1155556Coordinates: 39°57′02″N 83°06′56″W / 39.9505556°N 83.1155556°W / 39.9505556; -83.1155556
Opening date 1969 (enclosed 1983)
Closing date 2012
Developer Richard E. Jacobs Group
Management Cyndi L. Perkins, General Manager
Owner The Krone Group, LLC
Total retail floor area 860,000 ft²
No. of floors 1 (2 in anchors)

Westland Mall is an 860,000-square-foot (80,000 m2) shopping center located on the west side of Columbus, Ohio, at the western intersection of U.S. Route 40 and Interstate 270.

As of November 2012, Westland Mall was reported as closed to all traffic, pending redevelopment of the property.

History

Westland Mall opened in February 1969 as an open-air shopping center. The original anchor stores were Lazarus, Sears, and JC Penney, as well as Woolworth which acted as a secondary anchor. The Lazarus store, the chain's first suburban operation, had opened as a free-standing location in 1962. The Sears and JC Penney were built, along with the mall, in 1967-1969, and the Lazarus was also expanded at that time. The mall was enclosed sometime in 1982.

The Sears store was constructed as a two-story building, as were the other two anchors, but only the main floor is currently utilized as retail space; the upper level was closed off to customers at some point during the 1980s. At one point the upper level was used as office space for Discover when it was still under Sears ownership.

Westland was one of four directionally-named shopping centers in Columbus, along with Northland (the original mall in Columbus, closed in 2002 and demolished in 2004), Eastland (still in operation), and Southland (a smaller discount-style mall, now closed). All but Southland were constructed and originally operated by the Richard E. Jacobs Group, and featured the same mix of anchor stores.

Decline

Although considered a major landmark in the Columbus area, Westland Mall faced many challenges towards the end of the 20th century that would eventually see it lose its status as a premier shopping destination for the city's far west side. It was negatively affected by the opening of the nearby Mall at Tuttle Crossing in 1997, which attracted many customers that may have otherwise shopped at Westland. In particular, JCPenney abandoned Westland for Tuttle, giving the latter a perceived edge; the move gave Tuttle four anchor stores while reducing Westland to two.[1] The Woolworth store, which closed with most of the chain in 1997, became a Staples that closed off the portion of the store that connected to the mall; the interior-facing portion became a Footaction USA. Other major stores, such as Express and The Limited, also left Westland, motivated both by shifting economic fortunes in Columbus as well as an increase in crime around the Westland area. After its enclosure in 1982, Westland never saw another major renovation despite both of its sister malls, Northland and Eastland, receiving facelifts in the early 1990s, and the increasingly dated look of the shopping center also worked against its attracting shoppers and major retailers as time went on.

Kashani, a developer which also owned North Towne Square in Toledo, Ohio at the time, bought the mall in 2003 and attempted to reposition Westland as a "bazaar"-style mall with a number of specialty shops (including a used bookstore, several arts and crafts dealers, and a karate school, among others) added to Westland's few remaining chain stores.[1] The Lazarus store was converted to Lazarus-Macy's in 2003, and subsequently to Macy's in 2005; this store was closed in 2007, leaving Sears as the sole remaining anchor. By that point virtually all of the newer stores added under Kashani ownership had also closed, leaving only a small handful of storefronts operating in a virtually empty mall.

Former Lazarus anchor at Westland Mall (photo taken prior to rebranding as Macy's)

By 2010, Westland Mall contained fewer than 15 active businesses; at one time it housed approximately 80. The only remaining national retailers were Sears (which was also the last remaining original mall tenant), Finish Line, Champs Sports, GNC, and Staples; the latter, as noted earlier, lacked direct mall access. The remainder of operating storefronts were small, bazaar-style shops, eateries, and a local branch of the Franklin County Sheriff's office. For much of the late 2000s, it was an example of a "dead mall" that remained completely open to the public (aside from the closed storefronts) and still retained one major anchor.

Current use and future plans

Although Westland Mall itself is now closed, the structure still stands as of May 2013 and parts of it are still in use, most notably the Sears store.

The former JCPenney store is now used for community events hosted by the mall, including about six gun shows per year.

In 2008, home-improvement retailer Menards made plans to expand into the Columbus market, with a store proposed for Westland Mall (which would have been constructed as part of a planned redevelopment of the mall property and several surrounding sites as an open-air "lifestyle center"). However, in December of that year, Menards announced they were putting its expansion plans on hold due to the general economic downturn at that time.[2]

In 2012, a new Hollywood Casino was constructed and opened near the site of Westland Mall, spurring new growth in the surrounding area, which had become severely economically depressed. The current owner of Westland Mall suggested that he was working with county officials on possible redevelopment options for the property, but indicated that whatever is decided, it likely "won't be a mall any longer." An announcement about the future of the site is expected to come in 2013.[3]

As of September 2011, Sears had closed its entrance to the mall.[4] Plans were announced in March 2012 to begin demolishing the mall, except for Sears in favor of new development.[5]

As of 2015 Staples has closed its location at Westland Mall leaving only Sears as the only thing still part of the mall.

Anchors

Former anchors

References

  1. 1 2 Showalter, Kathy (3 March 2003). "New owners poised to revive Westland". Columbus Business First. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  2. Ferenchik, Mark. "Menards puts Westland store on hold". The Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
  3. Bowersock, Mike (2012-08-23). "Development Explodes Around Columbus Casino". NBC4i.com. Retrieved 2012-11-05.
  4. http://www.columbusmessenger.com/NC/0/10512.html
  5. http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2008/05/10/westland.html

External links

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