Staten Island Mall

Staten Island Mall
Location Staten Island, New York, USA
Opening date 1973
Management General Growth Properties
Owner General Growth Properties
No. of stores and services 200
No. of anchor tenants 3
Total retail floor area 1,274,000 ft²
No. of floors 2 (3 in Macy's)
Website www.statenisland-mall.com
The main entrance to the Staten Island Mall.

Staten Island Mall is a shopping mall in the New Springville neighborhood of the Staten Island borough of New York City, United States. It is the only indoor shopping mall in the borough.[1] It is the largest retail center on the island and is the site of the island's third largest public transit hub after the St. George ferry terminal and Eltingville Transit Center, respectively, with numerous bus routes that connect to the periphery of the mall area.

Description and history

The mall is owned by General Growth Properties of Chicago, Illinois. It has 200 stores employing approximately 3,000 people. Anchor tenants include JCPenney, Macy's, and Sears.

Prior to the construction of the mall, the land was occupied by the Staten Island Airport, which opened in 1941. The site was sold in 1955 with a shopping and amusement center, known as the Staten Island Center, envisaged. Construction, however, did not commence until 1970 and while the grand opening was in 1973, some stores (such as a supermarket) opened on the site much earlier, and were in full operation as early as the summer of 1970, probably earlier. Anchor tenants in later years included Macy's, and Sears. The mall's original developer was Feist and Feist Realty Corp. When the Rouse Company acquired the mall in 1980 they remodeled the mall by adding additional escalators to the six that were working at the time the mall opened, plus additional trees and several new fountains throughout the mall.

The last major renovation and expansion of the mall was in 1993 when the JCPenney wing was completed. It is currently a two-story mall shaped like a letter "T", with a gross leasable area (GLA) of 1,274,000 ft²[2] (114,000 m²) and a tenant GLA of 622,000 ft² (58,000 m²).

Staten Island Mall

The music video for the New Radicals 1999 hit single "You Get What You Give" was filmed in the mall.

On April 16, 2009, General Growth Properties filed for bankruptcy amid sharply reduced revenues and a crippling debt burden of over $25 billion. The company's stock price plummeted 97% over the following year, trading at just $1.05. At the time, it seemed likely that the company's strategy for reorganization will include the sale of properties. It was unclear whether the Staten Island Mall would be included as one of those properties.[3] General Growth has since re-emerged from bankruptcy, and Staten Island Mall continues to be owned and operated by General Growth.

In 2008, following the US economic meltdown, several stores, including some open for many years, closed down and discount or non-national retailers took their places. Other spaces sat vacant, with their windows being used to display other stores' merchandise. However, by mid-2010, higher-end shops such as Michael Kors, Pandora and Armani Exchange opened for business, and presently in 2011 numerous new brands (Teavana, Adidas, Love Culture, etc.) are relocating or updating their looks while new tenants continue to revive the mall's image.

The mall will be getting a renovation beginning in 2016. There will be a more updated modern storefront with restaurants similar to nearby Freehold Raceway Mall. They will also be adding a parking garage, another wing of stores and a movie theater.

On June 28, 2016, an 84-year-old man jumped to his death in the Sears wing in an apparent suicide. His name was not immediately released and motive was not clear. The man jumped from a second story balcony off a chair from a nearby food court.

The Primark store will lease the second floor from the Sears store at the mall in the future.

Transportation

Staten Island Mall
New York City Shopping mall park and ride transit center
Location Richmond Avenue & Platinum Avenue
New Springville, Staten Island, New York
Owned by General Growth Properties
Operated by New York City Transit Authority
Line(s) 8 local routes, 1 Select Bus Service route, 4 express routes
Construction
Platform levels 1
Parking park and ride facilities on Richmond Avenue and Marsh Avenue
History
Opened 1973
Rebuilt 1993

Several local, Select Bus Service and express New York City Transit Authority buses stop and either travel through or on the perimeter (where park and ride facilities exist) of the mall's campus. They include the S44, S94, S59, S89, S61, S91 local buses/limited counterparts, the S55, S56 buses with no corresponding limited buses, the S79 Select Bus Service route, and the X17A, X17C, X17J, X31 express buses.[4]

Anchors

References

  1. Glenn Nyback. "Staten Island Mall cuts hours of operation". SILive.
  2. General Growth Properties: Staten Island Mall, accessed January 17, 2011
  3. Michael J. de la Merced (April 16, 2009). "General Growth Properties Files for Bankruptcy". New York Times.
  4. "Staten Island Bus Map January 2013" (PDF). MTA. January 2013. Retrieved February 4, 2013.

External links

Coordinates: 40°34′54″N 74°9′56″W / 40.58167°N 74.16556°W / 40.58167; -74.16556

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