Fiesta Mall

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Fiesta Mall is a regional shopping center in the U.S. city of Mesa, Arizona (part of the Phoenix metropolitan area). Fiesta Mall is located at Alma School Road, Southern Avenue and the U.S. 60 (Superstition) freeway.

Fiesta Mall was originally developed by the Homart Development Company, which at the time was the real estate division of Sears, Roebuck and Company, and developer of several shopping centers nationwide, anchored by Sears retail locations.

Fiesta Mall opened in 1979, with a variety of shops. Homart Development Company and its mall properties were sold to General Growth Properties in 1995. Fiesta Mall was acquired by the Westcor division of The Macerich Company in 2004.

Fiesta Mall opened with four anchor department stores, Goldwaters (which became Robinsons-May in 1989 and changed to Macy's in 2006), Diamond's (now Dillards), The Broadway (which became Macy's in 1996, and closed in 2006 with the location now vacant, the store was 205,365 sq. ft.) and Sears. It was one of the first major malls to be built in Mesa, which has traditionally been one of the nation's fastest growing areas. There are about 135 stores in the mall with a total area of 1.3 million square feet.

Several strip malls, office complexes (including the Bank of America building on the southeast corner of Alma School and Southern, which is Mesa's tallest building at 16 stories), apartment complexes and power centers are in the immediate surrounding neighborhood, although many of the power centers date from the 1970s and 1980s and are showing signs of age. Several prominent national retailers such as OfficeMax, Circuit City, Borders Books and Petco have stores in these strip malls. A branch of the Texas-based Italian dining chain Olive Garden is located on Southern Avenue just off the main Fiesta Mall parking lot. Conversely, a Bennigan's restaurant at the northwest corner of Alma School and Southern, across the street from Fiesta Mall, has sat vacant since at least 2005.

Fiesta's opening hastened the decline of Mesa's Main Street shopping corridor (although it has rebounded slightly since the 1990s with an emphasis on locally-owned boutiques and related shops). Fiesta Mall itself has seen some decline since the 1997 opening of nearby Arizona Mills and the 2001 opening of Chandler Fashion Center, which siphoned off a great deal of Fiesta Mall's sales. Fiesta Mall underwent a renovation in 2000 in part to try and reverse the trend.

The demographics around Fiesta Mall have changed as the west Mesa area has become less upscale and more blue-collar in nature (as new development in Mesa favors the eastern portions of the city), which hurt sales in Fiesta's more upscale stores.

Contents

[edit] Anchors & Majors

[edit] See also

[edit] References

"Merger will cost Fiesta Mall", The Arizona Republic, Aug. 3, 2005 Retrieved 11/18/2006.

"Revitalization Strategy for the Fiesta Mall Super-Regional Retail District", International Economic Development Council, 2004 (PDF retrieved from City of Mesa website) [1] Retrieved 9/21/2006.

[edit] External links