flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Another well-known retailer files for bankruptcy: Here's the solution to more empty anchor stores

Retail Centers

Another well-known retailer files for bankruptcy: Here's the solution to more empty anchor stores

Where can you find the future of retail? At the intersection of experience and instant gratification. 


By Eric Arter, AIA, LEED AP, Vice President, Mixed-Use Studio Leader, NELSON Worldwide | September 6, 2019
Another well-known retailer files for bankruptcy: Here's the solution to more empty anchor stores

A robust click-and-collect facility would allow customers, as well as third-party delivery vendors, faster access to merchandise. Rendering: NELSON

   

Last month, one of the world's most well-known retailers filed for bankruptcy. Barneys is almost 100 years old and will close 15 of its 22 stores as part of a major restructure, and they aren’t alone. Barneys is among dozens of other retailers filing for bankruptcy this year. The question is, how do landlords transform this valuable empty space? The solution lies in repurposing existing square footage.

Brick-and-mortar environments can no longer offer consumers a singular purpose. Developments must be multi-functional destinations, hybrid facilities that support retail’s changing landscape and benefit the consumer, retailer, and the developer. The goal is to create physical environments that offer both a differentiated customer experience but also one that allows for faster product access.

With a national vacancy rate over 10% and a market that’s inundated with empty anchor space, the challenge will be to repurpose these once thriving mall beacons to become multi-purpose destinations that are both functional and still aesthetically pleasing for developers and remaining anchor tenants. The solution for dark anchors should not be to simply "plug the hole" with traditional solutions, but to look toward "out-of-the-box" concepts. A more innovative distribution center concept can offer a longer-lasting, versatile solution focusing on engagement, helping with supply chain, and better addressing today’s speed of transaction. The ideal repurposed distribution center offers three distinct uses.

First, is a warehouse “lite” facility offering last-mile delivery services – a smaller format transportation hub focusing on last-mile logistics to deliver items to the end user as fast as possible. The repurposed distribution center could leverage key elements from previous anchors, like the loading dock, receiving area and freight elevators. And keeping truck traffic to the backside of the development, ideally with a separate entrance, prevents a disruption to guest traffic flow.

Next, a robust click-and-collect facility, from parcel lockers to drive-through pick-ups, it will allow customers, as well as third-party delivery vendors, faster access to merchandise. This could also support newer concepts like cloud kitchens that rely on multiple delivery providers and a seamless pick-up process.  Supporting new business-models from BOPIS to ridesharing, will keep the concept fresh and flexible, to support the growing ecommerce market.

 

One solution for dark anchors is to convert them to warehouse “lite” facilities, which offer last-mile delivery services. The repurposed distribution center could leverage key elements from previous anchors, like the loading dock, receiving area and freight elevators. Rendering: NELSON

 

The third and final usage will be to leverage the street-facing facade for new, small format retail and restaurants. Providing unique localized offerings and a varied tenant mix will keep the development feeling current. These new consumer-facing environments should offer plenty of opportunities for consumer engagement and provide a new draw for legacy tenants within the development.

The refreshed exterior will help increase street traffic while creating an aesthetically pleasing façade to the much-needed back-of-house functions within the warehouse and click-and-collect environments. The small-format footprint could entice new offerings from start-ups to online-first retailers, providing developers and guests an elevated and differentiated experience.

This multi-faceted concept could support various industries beyond just traditional retail, such as breweries, beer distributers, and a consumer-facing beer garden or tasting room. With the rise of farm-to-table dining, it could be home to a grow house, farmers market, and signature-chef restaurant. Or even provide a footprint for cloud kitchens, a food truck park, and designated pick-up for food delivery apps. The options are endless when the concept supports consumers, ecommerce and supply chain.

 

Related content: In the age of Amazon there's nowhere to go but up

 

Moreover, many of today’s anchor spaces are large, unarticulated boxes that do not address today’s consumer needs and wants. The architecture is often forgettable and many of the exteriors haven’t been renovated since the original tenant opened their doors. This strategy may have been appropriate when most shopping centers were inward facing, enclosed malls, but today’s shoppers are looking for differentiated environments that not only speak to their unique communities, but also support their online habits to offer a more seamless, convenient experience. 

So, while shopping centers have been turning inside out, replacing long stretches of back of house exterior walls with engaging outward facing tenant facades, the market has now created an opportunity for anchors to participate in this transformation. 

This revolution starts with converting these unarticulated boxes into vibrant offerings that are approachable and engaging. Implementing a hybrid anchor solution provides a win for consumers, retailers, and developers, and will keep the space flexible for innovative new business models and functional for last-mile delivery opportunities. A new concept that merges experience with instant gratification to bring malls into the 21st century. 

About the Author
Eric Arter leads the Mixed-Use studio at NELSON where he oversees a multi-disciplinary team serving both domestic and international clients including Simon, Brookfield, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Macerich, Washington Prime Group, Cordish, Lotte and Hyundai Development Company. Eric has over 20 years of experience in mixed-use, retail, office, multifamily, hospitality, restaurant and entertainment projects as well as a background in institutional and industrial projects. Eric’s comprehensive experience and well-rounded skill set provides a unique understanding in support of a collaborative project approach. Projects in which he has played a key role have been the recipient of many awards throughout his career including: AIA Design & Honor Awards, NAIOP Awards and design competitions. Eric earned his Bachelor of Architecture degree from the University of Cincinnati. He is a registered architect, a member of the AIA, ICSC and he is a LEED accredited professional.

Related Stories

Coronavirus | Aug 25, 2020

Video: 5 building sectors to watch amid COVID-19

RCLCO's Brad Hunter reveals the winners and non-winners of the U.S. real estate market during the coronavirus pandemic.

Retail Centers | Aug 19, 2020

How has shopping changed over the past 100 years? A look at the evolution of retail

From malls and big-box stores to online delivery and mall redevelopment: Here’s how the retail landscape has evolved—and where it’s likely headed.

Retail Centers | Aug 12, 2020

Apple Central World welcomes first visitors in Bangkok

Foster + Partners designed the building.

Retail Centers | Jul 30, 2020

The future is a numbers game for retail and restaurants

Brick-and-mortar retailers, already gasping for air under pressure from ecommerce, were dealt a critical blow by the spread of the coronavirus that forced most stores and restaurants to close, or at best operate as carryout- or delivery-only providers.

Retail Centers | Jun 17, 2020

New cannabis dispensary under construction in Northbrook, Ill.

The project will be a national flagship location for Greenhouse.

Modular Building | May 22, 2020

‘Cargotecture’ is coming to North Carolina’s Research Triangle Park

Boxyard RTP, made from 38 shipping containers, will serve as a community gathering and social space.

Coronavirus | Apr 13, 2020

COVID-19 alert: City conducts a 'virtual building inspection' to allow Starbucks and bank to open

Bothell, Wash., issues a certificate of occupancy to developer after inspecting the property online. 

Retail Centers | Feb 28, 2020

Eat with the Peanuts Gang in this new experiential cafe concept

The McBride Company partnered with Peanuts Worldwide LLC to design the concept.  

Retail Centers | Jan 30, 2020

An all-glass roof hovers above a refurbished shopping mall in Montreal

This $200 million project provided the installer, Seele, with some valuable lessons learned working with large panels in colder weather.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Adaptive Reuse

Empty mall to be converted to UCLA Research Park

UCLA recently acquired a former mall that it will convert into the UCLA Research Park that will house the California Institute for Immunology and Immunotherapy at UCLA and the UCLA Center for Quantum Science and Engineering, as well as programs across other disciplines. The 700,000-sf property, formerly the Westside Pavilion shopping mall, is two miles from the university’s main Westwood campus. Google, which previously leased part of the property, helped enable and support UCLA’s acquisition.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021