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	<title>Comments on: Landmark Mall; Alexandria, Virginia</title>
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	<description>News and Views of Malls, Shopping Centers, and Retail Chains Past and Present</description>
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		<title>By: Lauren</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-155809</link>
		<dc:creator>Lauren</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2010 15:04:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-155809</guid>
		<description>@Brett,  Price Club is Costco&#039;s old name, and There was a Orange Julius in Springfield Mall in the late 70&#039;s until a few years ago, according to a neighbor, but orange Bowl was the Pizza place.


Landmark was doing really well until woodies closed, After that when JC Pennies came in it started to go down hill, the issue was that that Pennies nave had verry much and what they did have was almost just weard odds and ends, and for some resion I could never find anything bigger than a size small there. The outer issue was they never had any sales people in the store, it was like a ghost town.  It was at that time that the idea to move the food court down to the first floor came, and every thing that was down next to Sears on the first floor was going to get moved, and the third floor was going to be some type of teen entertainment center, but all that happened was the stores got moved.  After this Dave and Busters was going to go in on third floor but becasue they never made the food court move that never happened. And that When the mall started going down hill.  It could have been saved if L&amp;T had put in a full department store instead of just a clothing boutique but it did not happen, from there people just stopped going to the mall, there was nothing there to go to it just seemed to happen overnight, my mom and I went Back to school shopping and come christmas, half of the mall had left and by Easter it was just junk shops and empty stores. and a mall with old middle eastern type men who undressed every woman that walked past them with there eyes. 
The city has had plans to turn it in to a town center for years, and while it got its add on to the west end city plan for 2014, given the state of the economy It would better serve the community in some outer purpose....  leave Sears there build a small strip mall and perhaps entice the Safeway in the strip mall right next door to move to a New larger location, Throw in a a small Library, I know central is close but it does draw shoppers to a mall, look at Shirlington library in Arlington, add a few restraints. And a LARGE Recreation center/ entertainment complex, A indoor skate park/ Ice Rink. Would draw people from all over Alexandria and the surrounding areas given it would be the only indoor skate park in the DC area, and hte ice rink would be a boon for the city, and if it were hocky game sized, I would be better then Ketler ice arena at Balston that&#039;s half a rink.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>@Brett,  Price Club is Costco&#8217;s old name, and There was a Orange Julius in Springfield Mall in the late 70&#8217;s until a few years ago, according to a neighbor, but orange Bowl was the Pizza place.</p>
<p>Landmark was doing really well until woodies closed, After that when JC Pennies came in it started to go down hill, the issue was that that Pennies nave had verry much and what they did have was almost just weard odds and ends, and for some resion I could never find anything bigger than a size small there. The outer issue was they never had any sales people in the store, it was like a ghost town.  It was at that time that the idea to move the food court down to the first floor came, and every thing that was down next to Sears on the first floor was going to get moved, and the third floor was going to be some type of teen entertainment center, but all that happened was the stores got moved.  After this Dave and Busters was going to go in on third floor but becasue they never made the food court move that never happened. And that When the mall started going down hill.  It could have been saved if L&amp;T had put in a full department store instead of just a clothing boutique but it did not happen, from there people just stopped going to the mall, there was nothing there to go to it just seemed to happen overnight, my mom and I went Back to school shopping and come christmas, half of the mall had left and by Easter it was just junk shops and empty stores. and a mall with old middle eastern type men who undressed every woman that walked past them with there eyes.<br />
The city has had plans to turn it in to a town center for years, and while it got its add on to the west end city plan for 2014, given the state of the economy It would better serve the community in some outer purpose&#8230;.  leave Sears there build a small strip mall and perhaps entice the Safeway in the strip mall right next door to move to a New larger location, Throw in a a small Library, I know central is close but it does draw shoppers to a mall, look at Shirlington library in Arlington, add a few restraints. And a LARGE Recreation center/ entertainment complex, A indoor skate park/ Ice Rink. Would draw people from all over Alexandria and the surrounding areas given it would be the only indoor skate park in the DC area, and hte ice rink would be a boon for the city, and if it were hocky game sized, I would be better then Ketler ice arena at Balston that&#8217;s half a rink.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Lauren</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-155808</link>
		<dc:creator>Lauren</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2010 15:03:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-155808</guid>
		<description>@Brett,  Price Club is Costco&#039;s old name, and There was a Orange Julius in Springfield Mall in the late 70&#039;s until a few years ago, according to a neighbor, but orange Bowl was the Pizza place.


Landmark was doing really well until woodies closed, After that when JC Pennies came in it started to go down hill, t</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>@Brett,  Price Club is Costco&#8217;s old name, and There was a Orange Julius in Springfield Mall in the late 70&#8217;s until a few years ago, according to a neighbor, but orange Bowl was the Pizza place.</p>
<p>Landmark was doing really well until woodies closed, After that when JC Pennies came in it started to go down hill, t</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Brett</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-144851</link>
		<dc:creator>Brett</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Jan 2010 09:57:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-144851</guid>
		<description>@Brett, Amendment. It&#039;s a Costco at Pentagon Center, not a Price Club. And it was an Orange Bowl at the Springfield Mall of my youth, not an Orange Julius...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>@Brett, Amendment. It&#8217;s a Costco at Pentagon Center, not a Price Club. And it was an Orange Bowl at the Springfield Mall of my youth, not an Orange Julius&#8230;</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Brett</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-144838</link>
		<dc:creator>Brett</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Jan 2010 08:44:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-144838</guid>
		<description>I grew up in the area - 1970s. And I have lived in the area, after college, since 1985.
  In the 1970s we frequented Landmark and Springfield Malls. 
  Contrary to one poster above, Springfield Mall is not a small mall. When we moved to the area in the mid 70s it was listed as the second largest mall on the East Coast. It has only gotten larger though other malls also grew.
  Landmark was an outdoors mall with Sears on one end and and Hecht Co. at the other. Yes, Irving&#039;s Sporting Goods was there. It wasn&#039;t as good as Herman&#039;s in Springfield Mall but often worth a stop for a high school male. 
  The cafeteria back then was a Wyatt&#039;s or maybe a Furr&#039;s. Maybe it became a Hot Shoppes later. There was a Raleigh&#039;s (upper-mid level clothing) about midway between the anchors. There was a People&#039;s Drug store near the Sears. 
  The Underground was added later, very late 1970s perhaps. It was a strange place with a small record store (was it a Harmony Hut?) and the freaky lingerie place.
  Since we shopped at Sears for school clothes we always seemed to be at Landmark when it was cold. Being uncovered made it less desirable.
  It had a great location (though the intersection and exit off of 395 was a bit dodgy).
  Back then its only real competition were Springfield Mall and Seven Corners. The Sears at Clarendon was closing or had closed. Clarendon became a wasteland after that. 
  Seven Corners, not a real mall, bit a series of freestanding stores and strip malls, notably Lord &amp; Taylor (in a fantastic building), was already beginning to crumble. 
  There was also the small Skyline Mall hidden away at he Skyline complex near Bailey&#039;s Crossroads.
  Landmark kind of had everything in Northern Virginia/inside the Beltway and along the 395 corridor to itself.  
  I worked in Springfield Mall in high school and of course as soon as any of my buddies could drive we hung out there. Korvettes had the best record collection. But there was a Harmony Hut too (later Sam Goody). Penney&#039;s was at one end and Ward&#039;s at another. So we shopped a lot there. There was a Garfinkles in it too (my sister worked there). There was a Time Out arcade, movies, Roy Roger&#039;s (I still dream about those Double R Bar burgers), Farrell&#039;s ice cream/restaurant, a Hot Shoppes restaurant, Orange Julius and so much more. Oh, yeah, Spencer&#039;s Gifts consumed a lot of our hard-earned dollars.
  As I was going off to college Korvette&#039;s had been closed and the mall opened a whole new wing. 
  I haven&#039;t been to Springfield Mall in decades though I live not that far from it. I understand that it has not aged well and crime, nearly nonexistent when I was there, has multiplied.
  Posters are right that these malls have been hit by expanding options in the region. Springfield Mall has no doubt been hollowed out by Kingstowne and the expansion of retail on the locale (e.g. Springfield proper) and the massive growth to the south, notably Potomac Mills.
  Landmark got hammered from every direction. It&#039;s a great location with a large and decent-income local population in the condos along Duke St./Little River Turnpike/236 and Van Dorn St.. I think one of the posters above was referring to this stretch of road which has a high immigrant population rather than &quot;Glebe Road.&quot;  
  But the higher income folks in Shirlington and South Arlington along with northern Alexandriaites along Jeff Davis Hwy. who used to go there now have many more options, most importantly Potomac Yards and Pentagon City.
  I bought my condo in 1987 as they were building Pentagon City. It has proven to be a wise investment for the Simon Co. (and for me too!) Being on the Metro also makes it a major stop for District residents; which explains the large number of blacks at a mall in lily-white Arlington. And no one holds it against them. It&#039;s a very safe mall.
  I loved the mall when it opened - Brentanos, Scribners, Eddie Bauer, and a movieplex. Alas, they are all gone, replaced by more women&#039;s fashion stores and jewelers... I still shop there though I shop more at the adjacent later-built Pentagon Row (on the side closest to me) and Pentagon Center (on the other side) with its Best Buy, Borders and Marshalls. I understand that Pentagon Center, redeveloped out of an old AT&amp;T warehouse, is slated to be redeveloped again. The whole area is packed with &quot;luxury&quot; condos and a massive &quot;ultra luxury&quot; development is being build just across the street.
  Crystal City, mentioned by someone, hasn&#039;t helped Landmark, by undergoing a renaissance itself. Not so much shopping but swanky restaurants (Mortons, Ruth&#039;s Chris, McCormick &amp; Schmick, Jaleo, P.F. Chang&#039;s...). 
  Also developing in the area over the last decade, the rebirths of Clarendon (condos and hip shops and restaurants) and Bailey&#039;s Crossroads (Best Buy, Borders, Marshalls, Ross, Old Navy...). The Skyline Mall was redeveloped into a single Target store.
  Even down and out Seven Corners rebuilt to a great extent (Ross, Barnes &amp; Noble, Guitar Center, Home Depot [the one the Beltway sniper shot the FBI lady at]).
  Someone above mentioned a Memco. There never was a Memco at Landmark but you were close. It was down 236 a few miles at the intersection of Braddock Rd. It went through a number of identities including life as a Bradlee&#039;s. It&#039;s now a Home Depot. 
  The Lord &amp; Taylor at Seven Corners became a Caldor and is now a Sears.
  I&#039;m at Landmark about once a year - for the Sears usually. It is a weird place with a strange mix of tenants and absurd traffic patterns. Very unenticing.
  By the way. I pass by every day to and from work and it is the closest mall to my work (about 2.5 miles away from my office). Yet none of my coworkers ever go there...  
  I&#039;m really not sure what could help. There are a lot of people who live in the area but since they have to get into their to get to the mall they go elsewhere. There&#039;s a BJ&#039;s catty-corner.
  I&#039;m thinking they need to think outside the box and tempt someone like a BJ&#039;s into the mall. I know that the Price Club at Pentagon Center drives a lot of traffic. Maybe a massive Best Buy (though there are three nearby)?  
   What they really need to do is get the mall onto the Metro line. In some far future they should press the Silver Line to head down Rt. 7 into Falls Church, pass through Bailey&#039;s Crossroads, Skyline, drop over to Mark Center and then to Landmark. They could then connect with the Yellow Line terminus at Van Dorn or Springfield.     
  Of course Landmark might not be around by then.
  Well, those are my thoughts.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I grew up in the area &#8211; 1970s. And I have lived in the area, after college, since 1985.<br />
  In the 1970s we frequented Landmark and Springfield Malls.<br />
  Contrary to one poster above, Springfield Mall is not a small mall. When we moved to the area in the mid 70s it was listed as the second largest mall on the East Coast. It has only gotten larger though other malls also grew.<br />
  Landmark was an outdoors mall with Sears on one end and and Hecht Co. at the other. Yes, Irving&#8217;s Sporting Goods was there. It wasn&#8217;t as good as Herman&#8217;s in Springfield Mall but often worth a stop for a high school male.<br />
  The cafeteria back then was a Wyatt&#8217;s or maybe a Furr&#8217;s. Maybe it became a Hot Shoppes later. There was a Raleigh&#8217;s (upper-mid level clothing) about midway between the anchors. There was a People&#8217;s Drug store near the Sears.<br />
  The Underground was added later, very late 1970s perhaps. It was a strange place with a small record store (was it a Harmony Hut?) and the freaky lingerie place.<br />
  Since we shopped at Sears for school clothes we always seemed to be at Landmark when it was cold. Being uncovered made it less desirable.<br />
  It had a great location (though the intersection and exit off of 395 was a bit dodgy).<br />
  Back then its only real competition were Springfield Mall and Seven Corners. The Sears at Clarendon was closing or had closed. Clarendon became a wasteland after that.<br />
  Seven Corners, not a real mall, bit a series of freestanding stores and strip malls, notably Lord &amp; Taylor (in a fantastic building), was already beginning to crumble.<br />
  There was also the small Skyline Mall hidden away at he Skyline complex near Bailey&#8217;s Crossroads.<br />
  Landmark kind of had everything in Northern Virginia/inside the Beltway and along the 395 corridor to itself.<br />
  I worked in Springfield Mall in high school and of course as soon as any of my buddies could drive we hung out there. Korvettes had the best record collection. But there was a Harmony Hut too (later Sam Goody). Penney&#8217;s was at one end and Ward&#8217;s at another. So we shopped a lot there. There was a Garfinkles in it too (my sister worked there). There was a Time Out arcade, movies, Roy Roger&#8217;s (I still dream about those Double R Bar burgers), Farrell&#8217;s ice cream/restaurant, a Hot Shoppes restaurant, Orange Julius and so much more. Oh, yeah, Spencer&#8217;s Gifts consumed a lot of our hard-earned dollars.<br />
  As I was going off to college Korvette&#8217;s had been closed and the mall opened a whole new wing.<br />
  I haven&#8217;t been to Springfield Mall in decades though I live not that far from it. I understand that it has not aged well and crime, nearly nonexistent when I was there, has multiplied.<br />
  Posters are right that these malls have been hit by expanding options in the region. Springfield Mall has no doubt been hollowed out by Kingstowne and the expansion of retail on the locale (e.g. Springfield proper) and the massive growth to the south, notably Potomac Mills.<br />
  Landmark got hammered from every direction. It&#8217;s a great location with a large and decent-income local population in the condos along Duke St./Little River Turnpike/236 and Van Dorn St.. I think one of the posters above was referring to this stretch of road which has a high immigrant population rather than &#8220;Glebe Road.&#8221;<br />
  But the higher income folks in Shirlington and South Arlington along with northern Alexandriaites along Jeff Davis Hwy. who used to go there now have many more options, most importantly Potomac Yards and Pentagon City.<br />
  I bought my condo in 1987 as they were building Pentagon City. It has proven to be a wise investment for the Simon Co. (and for me too!) Being on the Metro also makes it a major stop for District residents; which explains the large number of blacks at a mall in lily-white Arlington. And no one holds it against them. It&#8217;s a very safe mall.<br />
  I loved the mall when it opened &#8211; Brentanos, Scribners, Eddie Bauer, and a movieplex. Alas, they are all gone, replaced by more women&#8217;s fashion stores and jewelers&#8230; I still shop there though I shop more at the adjacent later-built Pentagon Row (on the side closest to me) and Pentagon Center (on the other side) with its Best Buy, Borders and Marshalls. I understand that Pentagon Center, redeveloped out of an old AT&amp;T warehouse, is slated to be redeveloped again. The whole area is packed with &#8220;luxury&#8221; condos and a massive &#8220;ultra luxury&#8221; development is being build just across the street.<br />
  Crystal City, mentioned by someone, hasn&#8217;t helped Landmark, by undergoing a renaissance itself. Not so much shopping but swanky restaurants (Mortons, Ruth&#8217;s Chris, McCormick &amp; Schmick, Jaleo, P.F. Chang&#8217;s&#8230;).<br />
  Also developing in the area over the last decade, the rebirths of Clarendon (condos and hip shops and restaurants) and Bailey&#8217;s Crossroads (Best Buy, Borders, Marshalls, Ross, Old Navy&#8230;). The Skyline Mall was redeveloped into a single Target store.<br />
  Even down and out Seven Corners rebuilt to a great extent (Ross, Barnes &amp; Noble, Guitar Center, Home Depot [the one the Beltway sniper shot the FBI lady at]).<br />
  Someone above mentioned a Memco. There never was a Memco at Landmark but you were close. It was down 236 a few miles at the intersection of Braddock Rd. It went through a number of identities including life as a Bradlee&#8217;s. It&#8217;s now a Home Depot.<br />
  The Lord &amp; Taylor at Seven Corners became a Caldor and is now a Sears.<br />
  I&#8217;m at Landmark about once a year &#8211; for the Sears usually. It is a weird place with a strange mix of tenants and absurd traffic patterns. Very unenticing.<br />
  By the way. I pass by every day to and from work and it is the closest mall to my work (about 2.5 miles away from my office). Yet none of my coworkers ever go there&#8230;<br />
  I&#8217;m really not sure what could help. There are a lot of people who live in the area but since they have to get into their to get to the mall they go elsewhere. There&#8217;s a BJ&#8217;s catty-corner.<br />
  I&#8217;m thinking they need to think outside the box and tempt someone like a BJ&#8217;s into the mall. I know that the Price Club at Pentagon Center drives a lot of traffic. Maybe a massive Best Buy (though there are three nearby)?<br />
   What they really need to do is get the mall onto the Metro line. In some far future they should press the Silver Line to head down Rt. 7 into Falls Church, pass through Bailey&#8217;s Crossroads, Skyline, drop over to Mark Center and then to Landmark. They could then connect with the Yellow Line terminus at Van Dorn or Springfield.<br />
  Of course Landmark might not be around by then.<br />
  Well, those are my thoughts.</p>
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		<title>By: SEAN</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-106488</link>
		<dc:creator>SEAN</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2009 15:29:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-106488</guid>
		<description>As Owner Struggles, Landmark Mall Languishes
Recession, Delay Of Long-Planned Makeover Take Toll

By Ylan Q. Mui
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 3, 2009 



This is what a dying mall looks like: Long stretches of vacant storefronts and blank walls. A department store with empty shelves preparing to shut down for good. A little boy running around the children&#039;s play area alone. 

Landmark Mall in Alexandria is part of a growing list of ailing shopping centers across the country that have borne the brunt of the recession. Owner General Growth Properties unveiled ambitious plans five years ago to remake the 52-acre center into a suburban oasis of office buildings, homes and shops. But the process was dogged by delays, and now the financial crisis has delivered a triple whammy. 

General Growth filed for bankruptcy protection this spring. The credit crunch has dried up the market for the $2 billion in capital required for the makeover. And consumers just aren&#039;t shopping, with the discretionary purchases that are the lifeblood of malls taking the biggest hit. Monthly sales at apparel stores have fallen an average of 6 percent compared with last year, while sales at department stores -- which typically anchor a mall -- have plummeted an average of 10 percent, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers, a trade group. 

General Growth said it remains committed to overhauling Landmark Mall, and city officials are forging on with permits. But the timeline remains nebulous, and the aging shopping center waits in limbo. 

&quot;We are seeing some of these properties just sitting there where nothing is going to happen until there&#039;s capital back in the marketplace,&quot; said Michael P. Kercheval, chief executive of the ICSC. 

The vision for Landmark involves tearing down the mall and replacing it with a 5 million-square-foot, mixed-use &quot;lifestyle center&quot; that mimics the feel of a town square, with shopping and restaurants next to offices and homes. There were 89 such projects under construction during the first quarter of the year, according to research firm CoStar Group, but only 18 traditional enclosed malls. Still, traditional malls dominate the landscape with more than 800 properties compared with about 300 lifestyle centers. 

As the recession picked up steam, mall-based retailers got slammed. Shoppers slashed discretionary spending on clothing and entertainment at the specialty stores that line the walkways. The department stores that anchor malls suffered as consumers traded down to discounters. Retailers began shuttering stores -- or going out of business altogether. 

Crabtree &amp; Evelyn, which has 125 stores, filed for bankruptcy protection Wednesday. Whitehall Jewelers, Bombay Company and Sharper Image are just a handful of chains to liquidate their stores over the past two years, a total of 843 locations. Mall staples such as Ann Taylor, Talbots and Pacific Sunwear have collectively shuttered hundreds of stores. Other retailers are paring down expansion plans. 

Strong malls such as Tysons Corner Center and the Fashion Centre at Pentagon City, where there are waiting lists for tenants to get in, were able to absorb the losses. But for mid-tier players such as Landmark, a store closing often ends in a dark, empty space. 

Nationally, vacancy rates have risen from about 4 percent in 2006 to an average of 7.1 percent for regional malls, according to CoStar. Sales per square foot for non-anchor stores fell 11 percent in March, the most recent month for which statistics are available, according to the ICSC. General Growth does not disclose vacancy rates for specific properties. The City of Alexandria said vacancies at Landmark were &quot;low&quot; and estimated sales per square foot at $125 to $150, compared with the national average of $376, not including anchor tenants. Sales tax revenue from Landmark has plummeted to $1 million annually, down about 25 percent since it was first slated for redevelopment five years ago, the city said. 

Landmark is already full of small-time tenants. The blinking sign at Mr. Mini Mart wishes shoppers a happy Ramadan. Alliance Dance Institute is home to the Alexandria Ballet and teaches adult ballroom classes. There is a dollar store, a wig store and a tobacco shop. Anchor Lord &amp; Taylor is preparing to go dark. 

General Growth said that when redevelopment plans were unveiled five years ago, Landmark prepared by no longer offering the long-term leases favored by national tenants. That plan has backfired as the makeover got put on hold. Sears, Macy&#039;s, Ann Taylor Loft and Victoria&#039;s Secret are among only a handful of national chains that remain. 

Ahkeibo Blake has worked as a barber at Touch Up Hair Gallery at the mall for over a year. He said his weekly pay has dropped from $1,700 when he started to about $600. He has noticed that the mall is less crowded, and his clients are stretching the time between their appointments -- and scaling back on services once they do come in. 

But Blake said he doesn&#039;t blame them for not coming to the mall. He lives across the street, but he rarely shops at Landmark. Instead, he drives to Maryland for a shopping center with a Dave and Busters. During lunch, he leaves the mall and its meager food court for takeout elsewhere. 

&quot;It&#039;s a very good place, but they have the wrong businesses in here,&quot; he said. 

Alexandria officials have not given up hope of turning Landmark into a shopping destination. It has a prime location just off Interstate 395, where more than 294,000 cars pass the mall every day, according to General Growth. The company reports that household income within the trade area is $104,259, compared with the national average of $50,233. Nearly 300,000 people work within a five-mile radius of the mall, and the upcoming military base realignment and closure program is expected to bring 6,400 new jobs to the area, according to the city. 

The problems, however, are capital and competition. Landmark hasn&#039;t been renovated since 1990. Meanwhile, upscale developments in Clarendon, Pentagon City, behemoth Tysons Corner and General Growth&#039;s own upscale Tysons Galleria have siphoned away potential customers. Speculation abounded that General Growth might sell Landmark as part of its bankruptcy reorganization, but a company spokesman said that was unlikely. 

&quot;Landmark Mall occupies a valuable piece of property in a wonderful location. The potential for that property is tremendous,&quot; spokesman Jim Graham said. &quot;Our restructuring and current market conditions both make it difficult to commit to a specific timetable, but we are hopeful that we can work with our retail partners and the City of Alexandria to make the reinvention of Landmark Mall a reality.&quot; 

Last month, the City Council approved another phase in the plans to redevelop Landmark and the surrounding neighborhood. But Deputy City Manager Mark Jinks is also realistic. A plan summary presented to the council last month noted that the current economic environment could not support such massive redevelopment. Jinks said instead that the city is focused on clearing regulatory hurdles in hopes that it will be ready for a rebound in the capital markets -- and a turnaround at General Growth. 

&quot;We&#039;re hoping that it is a high priority,&quot; Jinks said of General Growth&#039;s commitment to Landmark. &quot;Whether it is or not will depend on what kind of company emerges from the restructuring.&quot; 

But the city seems to be hedging its bets. Jinks said his team has been in preliminary talks with other developers and investors, but declined to specify which ones. The city is determined to bring the site back to life, he said, with or without General Growth.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As Owner Struggles, Landmark Mall Languishes<br />
Recession, Delay Of Long-Planned Makeover Take Toll</p>
<p>By Ylan Q. Mui<br />
Washington Post Staff Writer<br />
Friday, July 3, 2009 </p>
<p>This is what a dying mall looks like: Long stretches of vacant storefronts and blank walls. A department store with empty shelves preparing to shut down for good. A little boy running around the children&#8217;s play area alone. </p>
<p>Landmark Mall in Alexandria is part of a growing list of ailing shopping centers across the country that have borne the brunt of the recession. Owner General Growth Properties unveiled ambitious plans five years ago to remake the 52-acre center into a suburban oasis of office buildings, homes and shops. But the process was dogged by delays, and now the financial crisis has delivered a triple whammy. </p>
<p>General Growth filed for bankruptcy protection this spring. The credit crunch has dried up the market for the $2 billion in capital required for the makeover. And consumers just aren&#8217;t shopping, with the discretionary purchases that are the lifeblood of malls taking the biggest hit. Monthly sales at apparel stores have fallen an average of 6 percent compared with last year, while sales at department stores &#8212; which typically anchor a mall &#8212; have plummeted an average of 10 percent, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers, a trade group. </p>
<p>General Growth said it remains committed to overhauling Landmark Mall, and city officials are forging on with permits. But the timeline remains nebulous, and the aging shopping center waits in limbo. </p>
<p>&#8220;We are seeing some of these properties just sitting there where nothing is going to happen until there&#8217;s capital back in the marketplace,&#8221; said Michael P. Kercheval, chief executive of the ICSC. </p>
<p>The vision for Landmark involves tearing down the mall and replacing it with a 5 million-square-foot, mixed-use &#8220;lifestyle center&#8221; that mimics the feel of a town square, with shopping and restaurants next to offices and homes. There were 89 such projects under construction during the first quarter of the year, according to research firm CoStar Group, but only 18 traditional enclosed malls. Still, traditional malls dominate the landscape with more than 800 properties compared with about 300 lifestyle centers. </p>
<p>As the recession picked up steam, mall-based retailers got slammed. Shoppers slashed discretionary spending on clothing and entertainment at the specialty stores that line the walkways. The department stores that anchor malls suffered as consumers traded down to discounters. Retailers began shuttering stores &#8212; or going out of business altogether. </p>
<p>Crabtree &amp; Evelyn, which has 125 stores, filed for bankruptcy protection Wednesday. Whitehall Jewelers, Bombay Company and Sharper Image are just a handful of chains to liquidate their stores over the past two years, a total of 843 locations. Mall staples such as Ann Taylor, Talbots and Pacific Sunwear have collectively shuttered hundreds of stores. Other retailers are paring down expansion plans. </p>
<p>Strong malls such as Tysons Corner Center and the Fashion Centre at Pentagon City, where there are waiting lists for tenants to get in, were able to absorb the losses. But for mid-tier players such as Landmark, a store closing often ends in a dark, empty space. </p>
<p>Nationally, vacancy rates have risen from about 4 percent in 2006 to an average of 7.1 percent for regional malls, according to CoStar. Sales per square foot for non-anchor stores fell 11 percent in March, the most recent month for which statistics are available, according to the ICSC. General Growth does not disclose vacancy rates for specific properties. The City of Alexandria said vacancies at Landmark were &#8220;low&#8221; and estimated sales per square foot at $125 to $150, compared with the national average of $376, not including anchor tenants. Sales tax revenue from Landmark has plummeted to $1 million annually, down about 25 percent since it was first slated for redevelopment five years ago, the city said. </p>
<p>Landmark is already full of small-time tenants. The blinking sign at Mr. Mini Mart wishes shoppers a happy Ramadan. Alliance Dance Institute is home to the Alexandria Ballet and teaches adult ballroom classes. There is a dollar store, a wig store and a tobacco shop. Anchor Lord &amp; Taylor is preparing to go dark. </p>
<p>General Growth said that when redevelopment plans were unveiled five years ago, Landmark prepared by no longer offering the long-term leases favored by national tenants. That plan has backfired as the makeover got put on hold. Sears, Macy&#8217;s, Ann Taylor Loft and Victoria&#8217;s Secret are among only a handful of national chains that remain. </p>
<p>Ahkeibo Blake has worked as a barber at Touch Up Hair Gallery at the mall for over a year. He said his weekly pay has dropped from $1,700 when he started to about $600. He has noticed that the mall is less crowded, and his clients are stretching the time between their appointments &#8212; and scaling back on services once they do come in. </p>
<p>But Blake said he doesn&#8217;t blame them for not coming to the mall. He lives across the street, but he rarely shops at Landmark. Instead, he drives to Maryland for a shopping center with a Dave and Busters. During lunch, he leaves the mall and its meager food court for takeout elsewhere. </p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a very good place, but they have the wrong businesses in here,&#8221; he said. </p>
<p>Alexandria officials have not given up hope of turning Landmark into a shopping destination. It has a prime location just off Interstate 395, where more than 294,000 cars pass the mall every day, according to General Growth. The company reports that household income within the trade area is $104,259, compared with the national average of $50,233. Nearly 300,000 people work within a five-mile radius of the mall, and the upcoming military base realignment and closure program is expected to bring 6,400 new jobs to the area, according to the city. </p>
<p>The problems, however, are capital and competition. Landmark hasn&#8217;t been renovated since 1990. Meanwhile, upscale developments in Clarendon, Pentagon City, behemoth Tysons Corner and General Growth&#8217;s own upscale Tysons Galleria have siphoned away potential customers. Speculation abounded that General Growth might sell Landmark as part of its bankruptcy reorganization, but a company spokesman said that was unlikely. </p>
<p>&#8220;Landmark Mall occupies a valuable piece of property in a wonderful location. The potential for that property is tremendous,&#8221; spokesman Jim Graham said. &#8220;Our restructuring and current market conditions both make it difficult to commit to a specific timetable, but we are hopeful that we can work with our retail partners and the City of Alexandria to make the reinvention of Landmark Mall a reality.&#8221; </p>
<p>Last month, the City Council approved another phase in the plans to redevelop Landmark and the surrounding neighborhood. But Deputy City Manager Mark Jinks is also realistic. A plan summary presented to the council last month noted that the current economic environment could not support such massive redevelopment. Jinks said instead that the city is focused on clearing regulatory hurdles in hopes that it will be ready for a rebound in the capital markets &#8212; and a turnaround at General Growth. </p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re hoping that it is a high priority,&#8221; Jinks said of General Growth&#8217;s commitment to Landmark. &#8220;Whether it is or not will depend on what kind of company emerges from the restructuring.&#8221; </p>
<p>But the city seems to be hedging its bets. Jinks said his team has been in preliminary talks with other developers and investors, but declined to specify which ones. The city is determined to bring the site back to life, he said, with or without General Growth.</p>
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		<title>By: PJ</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-95616</link>
		<dc:creator>PJ</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2009 03:16:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-95616</guid>
		<description>Hello everyone...

I lived across the street at &quot;The Alexandria Apartments&quot;  five years ago, and really hated it in the city...have things really gotten worse since I left?

By all accounts it has, but I&#039;m just looking for more information; any on the apartment complex itself would be appreciated.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hello everyone&#8230;</p>
<p>I lived across the street at &#8220;The Alexandria Apartments&#8221;  five years ago, and really hated it in the city&#8230;have things really gotten worse since I left?</p>
<p>By all accounts it has, but I&#8217;m just looking for more information; any on the apartment complex itself would be appreciated.</p>
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		<title>By: @TL DOG</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-95057</link>
		<dc:creator>@TL DOG</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2009 00:11:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-95057</guid>
		<description>I LUV IT HERE THEIR WUZ A REALY NICE SHIRT AT STOP THAT I WANTED BUT I CATNT FIND NO WEBPAGE</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I LUV IT HERE THEIR WUZ A REALY NICE SHIRT AT STOP THAT I WANTED BUT I CATNT FIND NO WEBPAGE</p>
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		<title>By: Jake</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-89283</link>
		<dc:creator>Jake</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2009 21:32:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-89283</guid>
		<description>I just found this:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/pitifulpussycat/164126765/</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I just found this:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/pitifulpussycat/164126765/" rel="nofollow">http://www.flickr.com/photos/pitifulpussycat/164126765/</a></p>
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		<title>By: Alexandria</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-82819</link>
		<dc:creator>Alexandria</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2009 17:35:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-82819</guid>
		<description>Here&#039;s the City website for the Landmark Mall redevelopment efforts:

http://alexandriava.gov/planning/info/default.aspx?id=7014</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s the City website for the Landmark Mall redevelopment efforts:</p>
<p><a href="http://alexandriava.gov/planning/info/default.aspx?id=7014" rel="nofollow">http://alexandriava.gov/planning/info/default.aspx?id=7014</a></p>
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		<title>By: JimmC</title>
		<link>http://www.labelscar.com/virginia/landmark-mall#comment-81283</link>
		<dc:creator>JimmC</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Dec 2008 07:54:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.labelscar.com/uncategorized/landmark-mall#comment-81283</guid>
		<description>Landmark mall was killed by a cultural shift in the area. Too many people from one part of the world moved into the Glebe Road region and started shopping the mall, screaming at the retailers and attempting to haggle prices. Their kids were very angry and when we employed them they gave five-finger discounts to their families and claimed it was appropriate because our fixed price system was deceitful and wrong when confronted. A lot of stores bailed because the shrink was so high and the profits were in the toilet, and quite frankly the Americanized customers were kind of afraid of the high volume of culturally religious garb appearing on so many customers in the mall. It doesn&#039;t feel like home at that point. This kind of thing doesn&#039;t work in a generic American retail atmosphere.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Landmark mall was killed by a cultural shift in the area. Too many people from one part of the world moved into the Glebe Road region and started shopping the mall, screaming at the retailers and attempting to haggle prices. Their kids were very angry and when we employed them they gave five-finger discounts to their families and claimed it was appropriate because our fixed price system was deceitful and wrong when confronted. A lot of stores bailed because the shrink was so high and the profits were in the toilet, and quite frankly the Americanized customers were kind of afraid of the high volume of culturally religious garb appearing on so many customers in the mall. It doesn&#8217;t feel like home at that point. This kind of thing doesn&#8217;t work in a generic American retail atmosphere.</p>
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