Del Amo Fashion Center

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Del Amo Fashion Center
Mall facts and statistics
Location Torrance, California
Opening date 1961/1975
Developer Guilford Glazer
Management The Mills Corporation
Owner The Mills Corporation &
JPMorgan Fleming Funds
No. of stores and services 300 [1]
No. of anchor tenants 7
Total retail floor area 2.5 million ft² [2]
Parking 12,000
No. of floors 2
Website www.delamofashioncenter.com

Del Amo Fashion Center is a two-level regional shopping mall in Torrance, California, USA.

With a current gross leasable area (GLA) of 2.5 million ft², it is one of the largest shopping malls in the United States. The mall features three food courts, seven anchors stores, including three Macy's locations, JCPenney & Sears, more than 300 retailers, multiple full-service restaurants, a new fitness center and a new AMC Theatres multiplex. It is currently managed and co-owned by The Mills Corporation.

Contents

[edit] History

Del Amo Fashion Center has evolved over the years from an amalgamation of several developments and developments on the western side of the intersection of Hawthorne Boulevard and Carson Street in Torrance, California.[3] From 1981 to 1992 it was the largest shopping mall in the United States, reaching 3 million ft² in size at its largest. It was eclipsed as the largest center with the opening of Mall of America in 1992.

In 1959 The Broadway opened the first store at what was to be known as Del Amo Mall. The actually mall itself as well as JCPenney and Sears opened in 1961 at the southeast corner of Carson Street and Hawthorne Boulevard. In 1966 Bullock's opened at a small open-air shopping center it had developed across Carson Street called Fashion Square (Bullock's developed several similarly named Fashion Squares, including ones in Sherman Oaks, La Habra and Santa Ana). I. Magnin, an affiliate of Bullock's opened a store in 1967 at Fashion Square, before the center was acquired in 1971 by Guilford Glazer and a major redevelopment begun.

In 1975, Del Amo Fashion Square, as the center on the north side of Carson Boulevard was now called, reopened as a second mall and included additional anchors Montgomery Ward and Ohrbach's as well as an expanded I. Magnin. Glazer acquired neighboring Del Amo Mall in 1978. In November 1981 [4] the two formerly separate centers were officially merged to form Del Amo Fashion Center with the opening of a mall concourse over Carson Boulevard that linked the former Fashion Square to a new J.W. Robinson's built at the northern end of the former Del Amo Mall that same year. The existing infrastructure was also renovated at this time and included a new food court and a then-state-of-the-art computerized help system. Del Amo became the largest indoor shopping center in the world.

The center continued to evolve over the years as Ohrbach's closed in 1987 and was subdivided into Marshall's and TJ Maxx, I. Magnin followed in 1989 with part of their store eventually occupied by Old Navy, while Burlington Coat Factory opened in the basement of the former Del Amo Mall. J.W. Robinson's became Robinsons-May in 1993, while in 1996 with Bullock's and The Broadway's merger into Macy's, the former Bullock's became Macy's Apparel store and two floors of the original The Broadway were subdivided as a new Macy's Home & Furniture store. Faced with a change in consumer shopping patterns, the consolidation of the department store industry, the existence of too many malls fragmenting the greater Los Angeles retail marketplace, lack of highway access and competition from the neighboring Nordstrom-anchored South Bay Galleria that had opened in 1985, Del Amo began to suffer. Montgomery Ward dealt another blow when it closed following the chain's bankruptcy.

In 2003 the The Mills Corporation acquired Del Amo Fashion Center from the Guilford Glazer Family for $420 million (USD). [1] Subsequently Mills sold a half-interest in the property to institutional investor funds managed by JPMorgan Fleming,[5] before initiating a $160 million redevelopment including demolition and redevelopment the former northeast wing where Montgomery Ward had been located, the renovation of 670,000 ft² (62,000 m²) of existing space and the addition of another 100,000 ft² (9,300 m²). Robinsons-May converted to a second full-line Macy's on September 9, 2006. This second store, called Macy's South Del Amo, is expected to be closed in the future and be converted to mall retail space. No definitive commitments have been made as to a timeline for these events.

The new open-air lifestyle center opened on September 14, 2006, bringing new specialty stores, dining, entertainment, and an AMC Theatres 18-screen multiplex to the mall. A Crate & Barrel home furnishings store will open late Spring 2007.[6]

[edit] Trivia

  • The mall was the setting of an important scene in the Quentin Tarantino film Jackie Brown. In the movie a subtitle stated that the Del Amo Mall was the "largest indoor mall in the world".
  • The movie Bad Santa co-starring John Ritter has most of its mall scenes filmed on the inside and outside of the mall.
  • The "International" food court was used in a scene from the 1982 movie Valley Girl, starring Nick Coppola, who later adopted the name Nicholas Cage.

[edit] Anchors & Major Tenants

A typical Del Amo sign
A typical Del Amo sign

[edit] Directory

(*Stores relocated to lifestyle center, **New stores added to lifestyle center)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

The Mills Corporation facilities
Operating centers

United States

Arizona Mills - Arundel Mills - The Block at Orange - Briarwood Mall - Broward Mall - Cincinnati Mills - The Colonnade Outlets at Sawgrass - Colorado Mills - Concord Mills - Columbus City Center - Del Amo Fashion Center - Discover Mills - Dover Mall - The Esplanade - The Falls - Franklin Mills - Galleria at White Plains - Grapevine Mills - Great Mall of the Bay Area - Gurnee Mills - Hilltop Mall - Katy Mills - Lakeforest Mall - The Mall at Tuttle Crossing - Marley Station - Meadowood Mall - Northpark Mall - Ontario Mills - Opry Mills - Potomac Mills - The Shops at Riverside - Sawgrass Mills - Southdale Center - Southridge Mall - Stoneridge Mall - St. Louis Mills - Westland Mall

Under development

United States - 108 N State Street - Potomac Town Center    Italy - Mercati Generali

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