Merle Hay Mall
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Merle Hay Mall | |
Facts and statistics | |
---|---|
Location | Des Moines and Urbandale, Iowa, United States |
Opening date | August 17, 1959 |
Developer | Joseph Abbell & Bernard Greenbaum |
Management | Merle Hay Mall Limited Partnership/ Urban Retail Properties (leasing) |
Owner | Merle Hay Mall Limited Partnership |
No. of stores and services | 95 (as of June 2008) [1] |
No. of anchor tenants | 4 |
Total retail floor area | 1,060,000 square feet (98,000 m²)[2] |
Parking | 6,000 spaces |
No. of floors | 1 (2 in center court area) |
Website | www.merlehaymall.com |
Merle Hay Mall is an enclosed super-regional shopping mall in Des Moines, Iowa, in the United States. It is the oldest regional shopping center in Iowa, having opened in 1959, and it was also the largest mall in Iowa in terms of gross leasable area before the 2004 opening of Jordan Creek Town Center in neighboring West Des Moines. It was also the site of the deadliest fire in Des Moines' history, which killed ten people in 1978.[3]
Sears, Younkers, Kohl's, and Target are the mall's current anchors while Applebee's, IHOP, and Starbucks operate on the outparcels of the mall. While most of the mall is in the northwest part of Des Moines, the wing that contains Younkers, Kohl's, and the food court is inside the city limits of neighboring Urbandale.
Merle Hay Mall is independently owned by the Merle Hay Mall Limited Partnership, and the family of one of its original developers continues to manage the mall. A Chicago-based company, Urban Retail Properties, handles the mall's leasing duties.[4]
Contents |
[edit] History
The site of Merle Hay Mall was originally home to St. Gabriel's Monastery from 1921 until its demolition in 1958. In 1956, the Passionist monks who resided there sold the monastery site to Chicago-based developers Joseph Abbell and Bernard Greenbaum. Abbell, in a 1994 interview, stated that the developers chose Des Moines for their mall because of the city's "reputation as a model urban area in middle America."[5] The mall was known as Northland Shopping Center early in its planning stages until Younkers executives suggested that it be named for Merle Hay, the first Iowan killed in World War I and namesake of the road in front of the mall, instead.[6] Merle Hay Plaza was originally planned as a strip mall before it was redesigned as an open-air plaza with two department stores and four buildings around a commons area shortly before construction began in early 1958.[7]
Merle Hay Plaza opened on August 17, 1959. It had 31 stores at the time of its opening, including its first anchor (Younkers), as well as a bowling alley that is still in operation today. A second anchor store opened later in 1959 as Sears moved from downtown Des Moines to Merle Hay Plaza. Other early tenants included a Safeway supermarket, Kresge's, Bishop's Buffet (which closed in 1995), and Walgreens (which was replaced by an Old Navy in 1999).[8][9][10] A movie theater and six-story office building were added in 1965.
In 1972, Merle Hay Plaza was enclosed, becoming Merle Hay Mall. Two years later, as Valley West Mall and Southridge Mall were under construction, Merle Hay Mall completed a major westward expansion that doubled the size of the mall. Two additional anchors, Montgomery Ward (which also moved from downtown) and Younkers Store for Homes, were added to the mall as part of that expansion. By 2000, Merle Hay Mall would attract an average of 35,000 shoppers per day.[11]
In a 1994 interview with The Des Moines Register, Iowa State University economist Kenneth Stone stated that Merle Hay Mall successfully adapted to the changing lifestyles of the 1960s and 1970s by offering longer shopping hours during a time when downtown Des Moines merchants began restricting their hours.[5] Author and Des Moines native Bill Bryson commented on how Merle Hay Mall's opening changed Des Moines in his 2006 memoir The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid: "My father never shopped anywhere else after that. Neither did most people. By the early 1960s, people exchanged boasts about how long it had been since they had been downtown. They had found a new kind of happiness at the malls."[12] (In 1989's The Lost Continent, Bryson wrote that "Jack Kerouac, of all people, thought that Iowa women were the prettiest in the country, but I don't think he ever went to Merle Hay Mall on a Saturday" when he commented on the obesity of Iowa women.[13])
[edit] Younkers fire
The original Younkers store at Merle Hay Mall was destroyed by a fire that broke out on the morning of November 5, 1978. The fire caused an estimated $20 million in damage[14] and killed ten of the store's 25 employees who were on duty at the time. The store was closed for nearly a year in order to rebuild.
In the spring of 1979, Des Moines fire officials announced that a hydrogen buildup caused by alkaline water leaking from the store's heating and cooling system caused the fire. Court documents filed by prosecuting attorneys in 1981 stated that an electrical malfunction caused wires that were covered in polyvinyl chloride to overheat, giving off hydrochloric acid.[15][16] Lawyers representing Younkers and the families of the ten victims sued more than 20 companies that manufactured or were associated with polyvinyl chloride, including Monsanto and Underwriters Laboratories. Most of those lawsuits were settled out of court in 1984, while the last suit against B.F. Goodrich was dismissed by a Polk County district judge in April 1986.[17]
[edit] Anchor changes
Merle Hay Mall lost its first anchor in 1991 when the Younkers Store for Homes closed after Younkers decided to stop selling furniture and appliances in order to focus on its more profitable fashion business.[18] Kohl's replaced it in 1993.
In 1998, during the chain's first round of Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Montgomery Ward faced eviction from the mall after an analysis by Kenneth Stone showed that Wards was operating a discount store instead of the "first class, full line department store" that its lease required.[19] Wards responded by closing in early 1999, and Famous-Barr opened a new store in that space in August 2000 while the rest of the mall underwent a $20 million renovation that year.[20] Younkers moved into the former Famous-Barr space on July 18, 2004, one month after Famous-Barr left the Des Moines market, and the old Younkers was demolished shortly afterwards to make room for a new Target store that opened July 19, 2005. Target's opening ended a period of declining sales at the mall, as sales had decreased by 8 to 10 percent during the first year that Jordan Creek Town Center was open.[21]
On March 10, 2008, the Des Moines city council agreed to rezone the area around Merle Hay Mall into a tax increment financing district in order to help the mall's owners pay for future renovations. The move came as the mall's assessed property value has declined by over $13 million since 2005.[22] Merle Hay Mall's owners plan to construct a new main entrance to the mall and relocate some retailers to other areas of the mall in order to create space for new "junior" anchor stores with exterior entrances.[23]
[edit] References
- ^ Merle Hay Mall Stores. Retrieved on 2008-06-07.
- ^ Urban Retail Properties. Merle Hay Mall. Retrieved on 2008-06-07.
- ^ Henning, Barbara Beving Long; Patrice K. Beam (2003). Des Moines and Polk County: Flag on the Prairie. Sun Valley, California: American Historical Press, 188. ISBN 1-892724-34-0.
- ^ Johnson, Patt. "Merle Hay Mall stays in the family", The Des Moines Register, 2004-10-04.
- ^ a b Elbert, David. "Mall reaches milestone", The Des Moines Register, 1994-08-22, pp. 1B & 3B.
- ^ Elbert, David. "Mall is best-known memorial to WWI soldier Hay", The Des Moines Register, 1994-08-22, p. 3B.
- ^ "Merle Hay Plaza Will Be "Mall" Type", Des Moines Tribune, 1958-02-28.
- ^ Bleakly, John. "Merle Hay Plaza Formally Opens", Des Moines Tribune, 1959-08-17.
- ^ Kasler, Dale. "Merle Hay Bishop's closing", The Des Moines Register, 1995-04-29, p. 1A.
- ^ Ryberg, William. "Shopping choices expand", The Des Moines Register, 1999-09-16, p. 10S.
- ^ Erb, Gene. "New malls vs. old malls", The Des Moines Register, 2000-07-23, p. 1D.
- ^ Bryson, Bill (2006). The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid. New York: Random House, 241. ISBN 0-7679-1936-X.
- ^ Bryson, Bill (1989). The Lost Continent: Travels in Small-Town America. New York: Harper & Row, 6. ISBN 0-0601-6158-2.
- ^ Healey, Jim. "Younkers fire insurance loss placed at $20 million", The Des Moines Register, 1978-11-09, p. 1.
- ^ LaMarca & Landry, P.C. One Theory of Younkers Deaths. Retrieved on 2006-12-30.
- ^ Alex, Tom. "25 years after the fire", The Des Moines Register, 2003-11-04, p. 1B.
- ^ LaMarca & Landry, P.C.. Ruling Ends Younkers Fire Lawsuit; Appeal Planned. Retrieved on 2006-12-30.
- ^ Kasler, Dale. "Younkers closing Store for Homes", The Des Moines Register, 1991-08-10, p. 6S.
- ^ Bergstrom, Kathy. "Shape up or leave, Merle Hay tells Ward", The Des Moines Register, 1998-05-16, p. 1A.
- ^ Ryberg, William. "Merle Hay Mall brings back the glitter", The Des Moines Register, 2000-12-03, p. 1D.
- ^ Morain, Erin. "Target brings Merle Hay out of sales slump", Des Moines Business Record, 2005-09-18.
- ^ "Council Gives Go-Ahead To Merle Hay Mall Project", WHO-TV, 2008-03-12. Retrieved on 2008-06-07.
- ^ Johnson, Patt. "Merle Hay money raises questions about use", The Des Moines Register, 2008-03-03, p. 1A.
[edit] External links
- Merle Hay Mall website
- 1960s Merle Hay Plaza photo
- Photos of the 1978 Younkers fire, from the Cedar Rapids Fire Department (PDF format)
- Merle Hay Mall is at coordinates Coordinates: