These malls seemed magical as a kid, especially during the holiday seasons with all the Christmas decorations up, such vibrant childhood memories. These videos aren’t so much creepy to me as they are outright depressing.
Yeah. That’s where we went as young kids to see Santa clause and as teenagers to meet girls. A time when social interaction was the norm. Maybe the next billionaire in waiting will be the one who finds a way for people to come out and be social in person again.
Yep. These malls were the place EVERYONE would go to, no matter your social or monetary standing. Even if you didn't want to buy anything (except maybe some grub from the food court) you were welcome there to hang out or window shop. Friends, family, solo... didn't matter. No cost to get in except gas or physical exertion to walk there if you lived close. That's why I'll always have extremely fond memories of these indoor malls, and why I just can't feel the same about modern venues that are micro-monetized to hell and back.
Indeed, I remember being able to spend nearly a whole day at the mall looking at the shops, granted, back in the 80's and 90's there was a wider variety of stores to peruse and lose yourself in......not to mention the arcades :) That said it's still bizarre to me that this is happening, not the changes to the retail sector in the wake of online shopping, but rather, that decently solid structures with existing utilities and quite a bit of available space (both inside AND outside) are just being allowed to.......decay into ruin instead of finding new life. Yeah, while low rent housing is one possibility I'm not sure if the surrounding areas economy would support that plan or not......and let's face it......if that mall were rebuilt into low rent housing it'd probably be bought up by one of those creepy faceless corporations that keep calling to ask us if we want to sale our homes.
@Patrick Brannon Huh, hadn't heard about them buying apartments.....though if they're pricing out the current renters......I wonder what % of their apartment properties are actually being rented out as opposed to standing empty. Like so many of those storefronts in New York City.
What’s crazy to me is how many hours and memories customers and employees logged here. How many friendships were made between coworkers, lunch breaks at their favorite spots, jittery first day of school shopping for kids and mall walking routines for the elderly. And now it’s all reduced to a pile of moldy rubble. My junior prom was held in a semi-abandoned mall, right in front of a shuttered JC Penny’s. It was fantastically creepy. I think that’s where my love of dead and dying malls began. All those memories.
@@archangelliii2536 I know a Sears store was the last anchor store to close at all three of the Columbus, Ohio malls I grew up with in the 80's and 90's: Northland, Eastland, and Westland.
Your excellent comment shows why we as a society need to question whether the smart phone and internet society we have created is really a good thing. There are values much higher than convenience.
Some of my fondest memories from middle school were getting dropped off at the mall with my friends. We felt sooo grown up that our parents would let us shop without them at the mall. We would eat at the food court, hit up all the best stores, and then use the pay phone to call our parents to come get us. What a time!
I feel sorry for American kids they have so little independence. At that age me and my mates would catch Trains to different cities and go on backpacking holidays alone. You can just ,walk , cycle, buss anywhere you dont need your parents to drive you. I like America but living there before you are old enough to drive would be very limiting.
Of course you don’t the USA is a massive and still has large areas that aren’t even populated. Hence we need a car just to get to house to a store. In Europe you guys are compacted and ran out of room. Of course you can take trains and bounce to cities. Tell ‘me you don’t realize how vast and massive the USA is without telling me you don’t know. Your comment alone tells me you don’t have any concept on how large the USA is.
I grew up in this area and grew up during Parkwood Mall’s heyday. It’s so heartbreaking to see a critical part of my childhood in such bad shape. Thank you for doing this video. I have so many memories there. Keep up the great work. Stay safe.
@@dalhousieDream Well, retail will always be a thing. I work in hardware retail and trust me, most of the big stuff cant be done online. Beacuse usually its FUBAR by the time it gets to your doorstep! Even my stores online delivery (handled by 3rd party) sent some poor guy a mangled tool chest.
Your comment moved me deeply, Charlie! You just described exactly what I feel. Though I didn't grow up in that area and never really heard of that Mall.. but when looking at abandoned and devastated places scattered around the world, we are reminded of how quickly paint cracks and peels, and people, too, grow old and fade away. At times we just look back at places from the past, and what we have is just a handful of living, breathing memories..
Having work 11 years as mall maintenance I can honestly say that the amount of scrap and recyclable material in these buildings is phenomenal. Stores moved out and left a lot. Printers, shelving, stationary, vacuums, cctv, sound systems and speakers. Not to mention the amount of copper wiring, stainless steel, and metal that is recyclable. A store moved out and I would be tasked to demo it for an incoming store. I cashed in instead of putting things in the landfill. After 10 years i still have metal beams and posts, carpet, tiles, shelving, and hardwood seating benches I still use. We'd make thousands on copper alone.
A business "controller" comes from accounting, not maintenance. As long as the numbers look good, recycling and upcycling is an unnecessary expense. Hooray Capitalism!!
Blue collar humans can appreciate the things that gave them callouses. White collar humans avoid labor because it would mean scheduling an extra trip to the nail salon this week.
@@michaeldelio1870 Now that I've rambled, please let me make it up to you all by coming back around and pointing out how the central bank of our country reduced copper in pennies about 40 years ago to save on the cost of making pennies on behalf of the Treasury. The people own the treasury but a privately owned bank prints the currency we call "money", thereby devaluing the pennies it complains of having to make.
As a child of the 80’s the Shopping mall was such a great memory of my childhood. My mom passed away from brain cancer recently and as I look back at the happy times with my amazing mom, there were SO many at the mall, Christmas shopping, school clothes shopping , going to the mall as a family because it was free and my family didn’t have money we had so much fun just running around there. It’s so sad to see them closing! I’m greatful I’ve been able to take my Angel daughters to a local mall here that’s somehow still afloat. Sad to see them closing and stores like JC penny that were a staple of my childhood with my mom. 😢
Honestly, the saddest part of this is that these perfectly good buildings are being left to rot. That’s so wasteful. They could easily be turned into something else. I’ve always thought of what if they could be used as some sort of super homeless shelters with food, beds, doctors, schooling, etc. to get people back on their feet.
i currently live in wilson, and pass by this mall all the time and went to it . Its sad to see it rot but they fear to destroy it because of "Asbestosis". There's also homeless ppl that are in the area living in or near the mall. My friends went to explore the other day, the mall is beyond repair.
I think much of the reason why these malls haven't been converted into large homeless centers is because I believe our government wants these people to suffer by letting nature and the elements kill them off. Large numbers of homeless people lowers property values. So you just know that they're not going to allow that to happen! There was a serial killer recently who was going all around in various areas of New York City targeting homeless people. One of them was even in his sleeping bag asleep when he was doused in gasoline, then set ablaze. But as soon as heard about these murders on television, my initial thought was, "that's no serial killer... that's the work of hired hit men" Similar happened in London some years back when abnormally increased numbers of homeless people were all dying from overdoses. Someone was moving some bad heroin around on the streets, and a lot of it. A suspect was eventually taken into custody. During his interro gasoline, he told investigatiors that some prominent people within the city and police department made him distribute this tainted heroin. I don't know all the details as to how he came into contact with these people, but it sounds like he was definitely a patsie. One who thy might have given him 2 choices - community service. Or prison for a crime he was about to be charged with, but would be swept under the rug upon chosing to do community service. And just as I mentioned before, the intended purpose was to thin out the numbers, then let property values increase back their market rates. i don't think there was ever an update as to what came of it all in the future. But if that could happen in a city like London, then it can happen here in the US as well. There is no love for the homeless in the US
@@Hammy750 agreed, people may think these places could be used but in reality they're full of dangerous chemicals as well as water damage and mold. I just don't see how the city allows them to rot away when they will come after us if we don't mow our lawn for a week.
You'd think they'd convert these places into apartment complexes instead of building new ones. I know people in my home province who converted several old run down stores, strip malls, and even an entire stadiums for other uses; apartments, warehouses, etc. One convenience store/video rental place I used to go to all the time as a kid was eventually repurposed into an apartment complex (and a pretty well priced one at that, considering they kept the attached laundromat). Although, go look up Memorial Stadium Dominion in St. John's, Newfoundland if you want a more famous example; its an old hockey arena repurposed into a grocery store!
Sears has a special place in my heart and I am devastated to see their demise. They helped to pay for my education through a fund they founded after my dad passed away so I am forever grateful for them and everything they did to help our family during such a heartbreaking time.
@@tampabaybuccaneer10 In Canada the executives gutted the employee’s pension plan. Staff who contributed from their own paycheques for years were left with nothing when they were laid off. CRIMINAL!
@@tampabaybuccaneer10 it's so sad! I worked for Kmart when I was 17 and didn't even recognize the place when I went back years later before they closed that location.
Jake, I always appreciate how respectful you are towards the buildings and the items left in them, as well as your reminders of how they were once part of the community.
My Dad was a Sears store manager back in the 70s, 80s and 90s. I basically grew up in malls. I can remember going to work with him on Sunday mornings as he would open the store and being able to sprint the shiny linoleum floors the with nothing but the security lights reflecting off the surfaces. The distinct smells of the varying departments from the rich, scented perfume isle to the smell of leather shoes and the rich odor of brand new rubber emanating from the tires of pristine, brand new snowblowers and tractor mowers (which I also got to sit on - a HUGE treat) I honestly kind of hate these video. Yes, they are infinitely fascinating to see the decay of bygone years - but to me, as a someone in my mid to late 40s they represent the feeling of watching a symbol of my youth rot into dust.
When I was a kid, our town was small, so we only had a catalog store to pick up orders. It was a treat to get to go to the big Sears in another town. At Christmas time, they had a huge toy department. I loved it. Years later, my husband and I bought a lot of the things for our daughter’s nursery there because they carried Winnie the Pooh merchandise.
I can't imagine what it would be like to have been a long time employee at places like this, working years or possibly decades and see what all that dedication ultimately lead to. All that time, all the missed plans, all the picked up shifts, all the stress over sales quotas, all the 'I can't I have to go to work'. All that to see that time amounting to this. Sobering.
When Sears shut in Canada it was found the executives had gutted the employee’s pension plan and the staff was left with nothing! Even the money they had contributed themselves!
As someone who was born in 1982, seeing you walk through these old malls that are frozen in time and look just like the mall that I used to go to every week with my mom and grandma as a kid what I feel is ... Hard to describe, it's like ... Sadness mixed with nostalgia 😢😢😢😢
I graduated HS in 82 so I've seen my share of malls around the Country. I simply don't see a need for them anymore. I do 90% of my shopping online like most
@@michaelt3308 shopping online made us lazy and shuttered from the outside world. I worked customer service for 13 years so I’m comfortable talking to strangers, that itself is becoming rare after the whole COVID nightmare.
@@AvenueD417 Agree to a point. Been in sales 40 yrs so talking and interacting with others is not an issue. You don't need a mall for social interaction. But Social Media and the internet has definitely dumbed us down and made society socially awkward IMO. ( I'm not so sure this was done unintentionally)
@@mmfrogi That's the real tragedy. Taking more natural land away to build Amazon Warehouses and housing when abandoned malls on huge plots of land exist.
This mall is actually in my hometown of Wilson, North Carolina. It definitely was the cornerstone of our small community of 50,000+ in its hayday. Eventually a new shopping center across town was erected and that kind of led to the death if Parkwood. As of literally yesterday, the City Council has purchased it and plans to demolish it and build a new shopping development. Hate to see it go but i'm glad that my hometown is going to get some new life. Thanks for this video. I'm sure those in my hometown will enjoy this.
Spending a great deal of my youth, (teens) wandering the local Malls, every time I watch one of these videos, I realize that the death of a Mall is in reality, portrays a little death of my youth.
Don't look back. Look to the future! "For, behold, I create new heavens and a new earth: and the former shall not be remembered, nor come into mind" (Isaiah 65:17, KJV).
@@davidlafleche1142 Is it "the lion and the lamb" or is it "the wolf and the lamb"? I challenge you to look this up in your oldest, most personal Bible. You may be surprised at what you see, and how that compares to what you thought you knew. Then ponder the implications of the conundrum before you.
@@nicholasbstone Here are the references: "The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them" (Isaiah 11:6). "The wolf and the lamb shall feed together, and the lion shall eat straw like the bullock: and dust shall be the serpent's meat. They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain, saith the Lord" (Isaiah 65:25). Okay, what about them?
The local malls used to be great places to go for unusual items. Now you can sit behind a computer and shop the world. But it was a special time nonetheless.
Best times ever! One of my first jobs was with Circus World toys in North Valley Mall in Thornton Colorado (one of the few still standing in Denver, all though repurposed along time ago).
The Gateway Mall in Springfield, Oregon saved itself from this fate by literally turning itself inside out. Originally an indoor mall, it was remodeled to make most of the stores outward-facing, becoming a glorified strip mall with a theater anchoring the small remaining indoor section. While abandoned places are fascinating, I think places that narrowly avoided abandonment are even more fascinating.
We had a small enclosed mall that eventually opened up into an outside shopping venue only to have it enclosed again. New investors reopened it and made it like a little Main St promenade. Been like that ever since and is busier than heck with restaurants, movie theaters, retail and grocery stores
I doubt it saved itself. Like all malls, it's living on borrowed time, especially with gas price gouging. Are you really going to drive to the mall 5 miles away when you're paying $6 a gallon for gas?
Last week I had to drive through Upstate New York and drove through Poughkeepsie, NY. I thought the South Hills Mall would have the same fate as the Dutchess Mall in nearby Fishkill. Dutchess was torn down and replaced with a Home Depot and some adjacent stores to the left of it are abandoned and decaying with a large parking lot with weeds growing through cracks. South Hills Mall became like Gateway as a newly renovated outdoor plaza with At Home furniture, Burlington, Hobby Lobby, Bob's Discount furniture, Christmas Shops, ShopRite grocery, etc. South Hills Mall was an unusual story that really enjoyed the 1980s and declined by the end of the decade when a much larger Poughkeepsie Galleria would open in 1987. It didn't have a food court so in 1985 developers built a cool, modern addition with high ceilings and the majority was glass-enclosed. It was all mid-1980s styling with art deco glass blocks, curvy long neon lights hanging from the ceiling and walls in red, blue, yellow and magenta. It was the first food court ever in the county area and had Panda Express type Chinese food place too. Strangely, during a college break in 1992, I worked a short gig in construction and on my first day I saw that the whole food court addition was demolished, and a large store was being built in its place, Service Merchandise. The small, new food court was dismal and depressing with four corner food shops.
Strange to see. Those types of malls were very much how we viewed America during the 70s and 80s, on TV shows and movies. In fact, in Britain we copied them to some degree. Now they are closing on both sides of the Atlantic.
I love ruins of all types: Anasazi ruins, Salton Sea, and old abandoned malls and shops where people were so happy to get a job, where lots of emotions were felt. The person who removed the Flowers sign and put it on a shelf. Were they the last out the door? Were they the owner who was so proud on the day the shop opened years ago?
You may want to check out the album "A Farewll to Kings"...from 1977. The Album cover will draw you in, and expose you to a profound musical journey of a fallen civilization.
I always think about that too. What was the story there. Especially abandoned run down houses and stuff. Were once brand new and someone moved in, to now. What kind of history and stories took place
Steely Dan or maybe it's just Fagen does a song about the last mall in America. On the Everything Must Go album. Came out maybe ten years ago. Would be a great background score for this creepy yet interesting film.
I lived in Wilson most of my life. That Rose's used to be the Belks, my grandmother worked there for years as the switchboard operator. Our school chorus used to set up bleachers infront of the Belks for a Christmas performance because they would always doll the store entrance up with garland and lights for the holidays. The KB toy store used to be next to the Flowers shoe store. I still to this day have a card in my wallet from one of the jewelry stores that gives me lifetime battery replacement in my watches. On the day of my Grandmothers funeral I found a tear in the pants of my suit and stopped into the JCPenny to get a new suit in a hurry. It's weird cause I can watch your video and tell you almost where every store used to be.
A family friend was the voice of Sears in our local mall; we could often hear her pre-recorded ads over the PA system. She's recently passed away but I think she used to run the switchboard as well. I remember the 2nd floor entrance was for the catalog pick-up! MANY years ago (we're talking at least 45) there was a cafeteria at Sears my mom and I used to go to before we went shopping! My three-year-old self loved the chocolate pudding, lol. I worked at See's Candies several Christmases and there were many musicians and choirs that used to perform, it was fun to get to listen to them. Ah, good times.
Your comment is a good example of why the posts below YT videos should be preserved, and why YT should not be able to delete them and especially not erase entire channels. People are creating a new archive of memory, a way of recording what was and what it meant to those who lived through such times. I wish YT videos included a "download all comments" button. Thankyou both for taking the time to write, such personal recollections I find fascinating. Something intrigues me: in the video where he says the number of visitors to the mall began to decline, what would you say were the primary causes of this? Bound to be more than one factor at work I expect.
It’s sad to see malls replaced with online shopping. I’m glad I was born at a time when I got to experience mall shopping, especially during the holidays. We have a mall here in Victorville California and there is so much theft and violence, I’m almost positive our mall will be shutting the doors soon. The next generations will never know the fun of shopping at the mall.
Up until the late 70’s, I believe, SEARS was the largest retailer in the world. And now, it’s a shell of itself. But, then again, as a kid I remember the lunch counters at Grant’s and Woolworth.
LOL, the 2000s is when the demise of American shopping malls began. Try being a kid in the 80s and 90s like I was. That was the PRIME shopping mall era.
Deteriorated places will never not fascinate me. If those decaying walls could talk, imagine all the stories they’ve heard. A women coddling her crying toddler, a couple arguing, a couple having their first kiss, a man eating a comfort pretzel in a food court because his child is terminally ill. Deteriorated places that once bustled with life and purpose feel whimsical not because the buildings are echoes of what they once were, but rather the walls themselves are aching for company once more.
Wow as someone who's old 65+ it's weird to see all the old shopping malls just being abandoned and left to rot in northern Ohio we have several malls that have closed and sit like idle dinosaurs that are prime real estate that could be redeveloped into something else. The same thing with old amusement parks. !!!
Live about an hour from Columbus! And yeah it's really sad to see the malls being left to rot. I'm a skateboarder and I always thought to turn them into giant indoor parks. Just such a waste of space. Fun fact by the way, Ohio has the most abandoned malls in the country! Maybe the world but I'm not sure.
I’m 35 and live around Cincinnati. Growing up there were several malls around here but the only one that’s left is Kenwood. The rest are mostly abandoned. There’s an Eastgate mall on the East side that’s about 25% occupied but it’s dying slowly. So sad what’s happened to Ohio, on purpose at that. Our factories, industry, malls, have all been shut down and closed. We ended up with heroin and drugs in its place.
@@Johnnyboi1986 Yeah I always feel bad about the heroin flooding the state. I saw reports that it was coming through PA from Newark, NJ. NJ is my home state. Sad...
@@robshnob123 yep, most people probably know someone who’s overdosed and died at this point around here. It’s infuriating, because many of us have realized it’s not on accident. I will say, having the amount of abandoned malls we do, they are cool to explore. There’s a mall nearby called Cincinnati Mills that has 1 store left in it, there are some vids of it on YT, it’s a neat place. There are buckets every 10 feet it seems like to catch leaks. Pretty run down but still has that modern look. I checked it out about a month ago.
I’m 22 and didn’t live through this I feel like an old soul sometimes like my soul craves genuine things not just social media fake stuff but when I was a teen my dad found a mall like this we went in to buy some school shopping like clothes and shoes and it was almost empty inside I loved it because I don’t like being around much people and it was so nice in there it was huge and it looked bigger since barely anyone was there. I honestly thought it was the coolest thing and probably a year later I remembered the mall and told my dad to take me there and it was getting destroyed I felt so sad and thought to myself that I was weird for caring to much over an old mall but I couldn’t stop the feeling of sadness and dread of modern malls but now that I see this video and many people feel the same I understand now why I felt that way.
FULL CIRCLE! You have no idea how wild this is for me and my fiancé, we started urban exploring BECAUSE of your videos! Wilson Mall was our first UX site! The Bath & Bodyworks tiles were bending upwards from the water damage, Crazy to see how they look now. Only a few popped up, seeing that many of them loose is crazy. Dont remember as many plants, but I definitely remember all the mold, super bad. Bummed the mannequins I set near the exits arent there anymore tho.... This is absolutely crazy, thanks for visiting and thanks for giving us a update to the damages!!
Happy hunting on your UX escapades! If a random stranger on the internet can make a small request, could you please leave things as you found them? Particularly if they seem to be where they were. While it's always amusing to have an "I am Legend" moment seeing a group of mannequins randomly standing around, it's always much cooler to see things as they were when the building was abandoned. Thanks, and stay safe!
@@mapesdhs597 - As the father of a teenager, I can assure your that 95% of their free time is spent on their phone. Even when together, right next to each other, they text instead of talk.
@@oldiesmusic76 - I said "free time". You can't control someone 24 hours per day. If you try, make sure you have saved up for your kids therapy sessions first. they will need it.
I used to work at Lenox Sq. Mall in the early '90s at B.Dalton Bookstore. I loved it, except for some folks wandering in to beg for money, steal and show off body parts to others. Now, with shootings, looting, robberies, and ripping off customers as they walk to their cars, the stores are closing up their doors and/ or moving elsewhere. It's not just the Internet's fault anymore.
They do get repurposed. These are multimillion dollar structures & property. Our community has taken the local mall & totally deconstructed it to outdoor shopping, senior living & a park & movie theatre.
@@lucyterrier7905 that is awesome. But there are still a lot that are sitting vacant. They should all be repurposed like this and turned into low income housing.
I have no idea how you guys got in here. I live an hour from Wilson and have tried getting in to this mall and 99% of the time homeless people are at all entrances and everything is nailed shut. There's also cops that are driving around constantly. The best I've been able to do is take pictures through a window. I've always wanted to be able to explore inside, guess videos will have to suffice.
Got to wonder what it's like to be a worker at that Roses, literally having a massive abandoned and deteriorating space just on the other side of the back wall of the store. Probably don't think much of it, but crazy nonetheless. Great video!
@@carolharris2357 Roses is actually a discount store like KMart and Walmart we have had them in Florida for decades. I thought it was weird that they would be an anchor store.
@@Damone7653 I think NYC is so BIG (as in population) that malls can still survive (I went to Kings Plaza in Brooklyn on a visit there and it was packed). But I think that when you see the dynamic in medium sized places in North America, malls are going the way of the dinosaur (I say "medium sized" because the mall where I grew up in Marathon Ontario is still around-but it is basically the shopping centre to go to for 100sqkm or more)
I was born in 1953, only one mall near me as a kid, named Randhurst near north west Chicago. It was really magical going there, especially at Christmas time. Other places like Golf Mill were a series of separate stores close together with covered walkways between them. Then later converted into a huge mall. Then the mammoth mall Woodfield was built in Schaumburg IL. These places were so special. A real experience to go to. Now, we just do this on line and wait for a delivery. Really sad. What will a person like you, be filming 50 years from now ?
Being somebody who works at a mid to high level for a small retail chain that JCPenney was actually pretty sad to see. 50 years, and you could tell it was a beautiful store when it was operating. The way the light came through. It reminds me of how sad the employees were when the Kmart that was open for 45 years near me closed. One of the oldest ladies had worked there since it opened and was crying on the final day, the way she kept referring to the store as “my Kmart” and hearing about how she remembered every remodel and reset made it quite heartbreaking actually. It was a GEM among Kmarts too, the employees put a lot of effort into keeping it nice even in its final years with no help from corporate. I think people assume that all retail people hate their jobs, but a real family does develop in these places and a store closing does feel like a genuine sad loss when you’ve worked there for years with the same crew of familiar faces.
So true I work at Kmart to I think it's sad when all the good retail stores closed and all these people loose their jobs. Things are already bad enough the government doesn't care about how Some of these elderly people are going to make it.
Retail and fast food workers over the age of 25 are some of the most dedicated individuals. So kind and happy all the time too. I’m convinced people who take that life path are old souls because they’re so content with what they have. God bless them.
Before my Sears met it’s demise it was like stepping back in time to the 1980’s! It literally was the mall’s time capsule. They never did a thing to update their brand or their stores or anything. Once Craftsmen sold out to China that was it for me. Going into Sears for me in the end days was like going to visit a old friend I haven’t seen in years that was successful and had the world by the balls, only to find him living in a trailer park wearing a nasty bathrobe and slippers, greasy unkept hair and a five o’clock shadow reeking of Marlboro cigarettes.
@@h.mandelene3279 Because I am willing to pay the extra amount for tools and other items that won’t fall apart. I purchased two sets of ratchet wrenches from Lowes..both Craftsman. Went to use one of them on a nut on my vehicle, applied very minimal pressure and it fell apart.
What blew my mind was. Sears already had the infrastructure to do what Amazon went on to dominate in. But, for whatever reason the powers that be decided not to pursue that and therefore refused to evolve and adapt and.. well You see what happened with Sears. I wish I could remember the name of the Particular CEO
@@htennek1 exactly… I can’t remember what the CEOs name was either but he ran seers into the ground on purpose. I guess they were done with it and in the end just decided to MoveOn. But they could’ve moved the catalog online closed all their brick and mortar stores and competed directly with Amazon. Why they didn’t is completely beyond me. They should’ve done away with their clothes in the late 70s and focused on appliances tires electronics and stuff like that. But like I said they just got to the point where I think they just didn’t give a shit anymore.
I’m a 2000s kid, so I didn’t grow up in the era of malls, but I have found memories of my grandmother taking me to the mall in Muncie, Indiana. The Muncie Mall is slowly dying now, with Sears, JCPenny, Macy’s, and Carson’s closed, and it is sad to see, because my dad grew up hanging out there, but now it’s just a few stores left.
I bought the very first Caboodle (cosmetic storage bin) they ever made at Sears before heading to college. I have a Sears branded mini blowdryer I also bought in the late '80s and it STILL WORKS! Sears was a staple in the 1980s. It was never a "sexy" store, but you could always rely on it for necessities. And who else grew up with the Sears Dream Book catalog? That book was what childhood dreams were made of. 😁 R.I.P. Sears. You were much loved.
So true, you could actually look at something before you bought it. Exchanges were easier as they were done in store and not by having to post something back to the realtor and you got out amongst people.
Disagree. Malls are an ugly part of our history in the 70s and 80s when we thought abandoning the historic/culturally rich downtown areas in lieu of building bland big box stores in the suburbs was the "future". Thank god, these fads have faded into irrelevance as city centers are gaining favor again.
@@agoo7581 Now we have an ugly gigantic parking structure to replace ours because there is hardly any parking around these little businesses that where once in a mall
I miss shopping malls as a child....especially during Holliday seasons The music on the overhead speakers All the decorations Socks it's now just a distant memory.....
I REALLY miss the malls of the 90s, I grew up in the arcades, eating hot "mall pretzels", hanging out with my friends, going the movie theaters and even shopping at Hot Topic in my mid teens. The mall was THE place you went to find anything you needed and a place for you to hang out with friends. With how everything else from the 80s and 90s seemingly coming back, I REALLY wish malls would see a revival as well.
@@left4speed519 I know right, a lot of malls like this one always had this sort of futuristic look to them, as if you were traveling somewhere new everytime you walked through the doors.
@@luxthedopestar9073 Dude, I know. I'll be talking to my son about something and he will laugh and poke fun at me by going "Yeah, back in my day in 1892..." I'm like Im not THAT damn old yet.....lol.
It's tough. I'm almost 40 and I feel like I've gone through stages of this! 😫🤣 I remember losing our Toys-R-Us. I remember losing Eastwood Mall where my Mom, granny, me and my sister would go walking in. I remember losing or 3rd important mall - Century Plaza... All early 90s on. I've moved on, travelled the country as a nurse... But certain stores, staples of my youth - get me in the feels 💕
@@Adrian-zd4cs This is exacrly what I meant. It's not the stores themselves or the companies represented, it's seeing the places where I made so many memories decayed and abbandoned.
@@ocoolwow I mean Black Fridays and Christmas Shopping yeah sure but we was a Community there a thing you did when you had to actually Socialized with people remember that? you know talking to Human Beings?
I worked for Sears for 15 years in the 90's & 00's. Sears was so cheap, they didn't pay for preventative maintenance, our HVAC was always down because they didn't want to pay the PM contract. I'm not surprised it is especially rough, they didn't take care of things.
These shopping centers were as cheap as the merchandise they sold. It was all expendable. That people anchor their nostalgia to late-stage capitalism is pretty sad.
Online retailers like Amazon played a role, but many malls were in decline long before online was a thing. For many middle class families during the 60's and 70's they aspired to shop at these upscale retail outlets and malls boomed. The 70's saw the rise of the Galleria Malls that were more upscale than the older malls and, once again, the middle class went there when they could. But, in the 80's, these malls began to be undercut by the discount places like Walmart and Cosco so long before the internet was a thing for the average person and long before online retail was a thing the middle class had to transition away from aspiring to shop at upscale retail outlets and, instead, had to make do with less. The internet came along and by about 1995 the tools needed to browse the internet became available and then, by the late 90's, companies like Amazon were the nail in the coffin.
Amazing. Everyone can remember going to malls just like this in their teenage years or with their parents as a little kid. Surreal to see abandoned malls today. Sad.
Cherryvale Mall in Rockford Illinois is like this. There are some stores that are still in business, but some former anchor stores such as Sears are gone. There have been shootings and violence there. Its unbelievable how much the mall has deteriorated.
Great job as always!! Being a 70s/80s kid, the mall was the true place to gather! It’s sad to see them fall by the wayside but we are in a new age. It’s good to see downtowns gaining some strength again with smaller, privately owned businesses finding a new place in retail.
We have seen many unique stores open near us. We have yoga places and smoothie shops next to pipe stores and bicycle repair spots. It's much better then the malls and walmart.
what does "we are in a new age" mean? Americans shop for primarily Chinese goods online instead of shopping locally? i don't think people realise what they're allowing to decline in their own country. First manufacturing and now shops. A lot of that cheap online stuff has pumped huge amounts of cash into a totalitarian state. Not the best idea.
@@lynnpayne9519 why is it much better? Would the same businesses be lesser if they rented a space in a mall? It's just s group of businesses. If the main focus of your pocal community is yoga, smoothies and bikes, my guess is it's a boho neighbourhood and the lack of corporate branding is seen as more charming . But that's just a taste. Malls are functionally useful, especially for people with limited transport or mobility or people with their children (especially as malls usually have toilet facilities - which not all individual stores offer patrons). Basically, I don't think communities allowing bricks and mortar stores to die off as being a sensible thing. These stores haven't necessarily relocated or been replaced by others.
Did an assessment on an abandoned hospital. It had only been shut down for a couple weeks and was shut down abruptly so everything was still in its place just as though patients were still there. I spent several days in that large 7 story building with no electricity or lights, going from room to room. I was never so scared in my life. Really creeped me out. I had nightmares for weeks afterward. Never again...
@@agentorange2554 If only that were the case. What we get for the most part these days are big chain stores in strip malls. It's more and more places to choose from fewer choices.
Same thing happened to our city, Brockton, MA. We were assurd, " oh no, the mall won't have any effect on downtown and the mom and pop stores". Within a year downtown was ghosted, the many small stores were closed and the whole downtown went into decline. Now the most of downtown is court houses and family services. Their answer to downtown restoration. Very sad indeed!!
I remember going to sears to look at computers which were a new thing back in the Early 80s. They were one of the few outlets that sold them back then. How ironic that they played an integral part in the stores demise.
i''ll never understand why struggling malls end up carpeting their corridors over any original tiling. doesn't it just make more work to maintain it for the staff they can't afford to keep? and it just ends up looking nasty.
When I was a kid in the 50's going shopping downtown was a huge thrill. Then everyone moved to the suburbs in the 60's the corner stores were the in place to be...then the malls came! They were thrilling. There is only one mall near me now, and stores are leaving. So sad.
seeing videos like this make me sad. especially all the vandalism. I remember going to the mall when I was a kid with my sister. Sears has been open forever, and just recently closed in the last few years. Every time I think of Sears, I think of my dad, because he was a service tech, and he repaired washers and dryers for over 40 years.
It’s happening to my mall as well. It’s an extremely slow bleed, with the renovation of its food court and adding a arcade, but it’s still not enough to save it. Kids just don’t really want to go to malls, and as humans of a bygone era, we’re slowly dying too. Funnily enough, a recent development of a outdoor shopping area popped up, and is currently thriving. I’m guessing people just want to feel alive while shopping, instead of just being in a huge building full of people. (And the annoying show cleaner vendors in the middle of the mall’s walkway)
I'm only 15, but I have so many memories at my old mall. All the old people who would populate the mall passed away, and it eventually had at most 10 customers per week. Most stores were already shut down and there were only a couple food places and an arcade. They had built a Wal-Mart right next to it, so everyone would go there. I remember Christmas shopping at the mall and when I heard it shut down it broke my heart. It was now bought by a different company, and it's going to be an apartment complex and mall. Hopefully they recapture the 80s style and restore some of the best features there.
It’s interesting your outdoor mall is thriving as well. I grew up in three large cities and the mall was always something special and fun. I didn’t get to go shopping all of the time and it was always and occasion to go. I remember riding the city bus into the next city to go to the mall. Those were good times and so dear to me. I am so sad those malls have become nearly empty retail and food court space. At least one mall renovated a lot of the space into office space. Maybe that is the answer for the future. Our outdoor mall in the area thrives. It’s always busy. It’s not the same feeling, but it’s still nice to people watch. It makes me so sad to see some of these malls just completely in ruins. I think of the people that they employed, the help they provided to the economy as a whole along with all of the great memories that people who remember and appreciate these old malls have. It reminds me that the m older and that times, along with people are different. You can’t go home again… that’s the perfect example of this.
My mall is thriving as well. A super big arcade called Round 1, a Pokemon store with a manga store, hot topic, and bustling food court every time I go there. Not every mall is going extinct, they just keep evolving to keep them in the public mind and draw in certain groups of people
im a teenager and i got a mall close to where i live and i love going to it a lot of other people do too i see a lot of other teens there but theres another mall near where i live that almost no one goes to or at least not near as many people as the other one kinda sad but i hope malls never fully die out because i love going to them so much
What's worse is that a good cleaning and that thing could still be perfectly usable. Run it through the washing machine and some kid could enjoy that for years.
I love these abandoned mall videos. They remind me of my childhood and how my Grandparents would always do the bulk of their holiday shopping at the mall. We'd eat in the food court, I'd always get to pick our Christmas PJ's in the Sears and then we'd head out to all the other shops. They had a Sears card and everything. That always leads me to think about how many memories were made with other people in these old malls. Holidays, special occasions, back to school shopping, or just a weekend shopping, there were so many reasons to shop at the mall back then. Online retail is convenient in many ways, but I don't get to form these sort of memories with my kids while I use my Amazon Prime account. Thanks for doing these videos BSF!
Your comment got me to thinking. I was in a goodwill yesterday and struck up a 10-15 minute conversation with the woman next to me as we skimmed through the entire dress section. We miss out on these things with online shopping.
Meryanp So true. It's convenient to do everything from the house, but the stuff we tend to remember is the exception, which means leaving the house. This is a great post, thank you!
I feel the same way. There’s a local mall that was built in the late 80s that I spent a lot of time in in the early 90s in college. It’s still here but it’s a shadow of itself. All the anchors are gone except a Dillards outlet that takes up only half its original space. I was walking through the mall right before Christmas last year and it was a sad shadow of what it looked like during Christmas 30 years ago.
My hometown (Piqua, OH) had its first mall in 1969. Another was opened but is dying as well. I may be a relic of the past, but I hate to see these old stores closing.
It always amazes me to see the closed restaurants often still have all the restaurant equipment still in place. That stuff is incredibly easy to move and can be worth a pretty penny on the used market.
@@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Yeah, better to scrap it and melt it down again than risk trying to clean it and use it again. You miss one tiny little spot and someone's getting a trip to the ER.
Man what a trip damn shame malls are closing all over the country it's all internet and shop online now sometimes I wish I could go back to the 80's even mid 70's when I grew up and stay there.
These malls are time machines. I have been working in malls since 1998. Man this looks like the mall in my town design wise. The mall I work in currently was built in 2006. So pre 2008 crash. So far it’s worked pretty well location wise. It’s an open air plan with parking near the individual stores. Our indoor mall had the original stores in it. One being Spensors. Sad passage of time. Delightful tour Jake.
As a former 70s/80s teenage mall rat, seeing malls as literal ruins makes me feel ancient. I can't lament too much though considering I'm part of the problem. For years I've only shopped at my local mall about six times a year.
Yeah I don't even remember the last time I visited my local mall. lt was probably a decade ago, or more. But I remember as a kid that's where all the action was. Ride the bus to the mall, spend like all day milling about, wandering back and forth between the arcade and Orange Julius or whatever. Checking out KB Toys to see if they got any new NES games in.
I was more frightened watching this than half the horror movies out today. There was a sense of dread, tension; I expected someone to come out and attack (thank goodness that did not happen). You made your own found footage movie and are already better than most. I appreciate this video so much as a former mall addict and mall lamenter, I really pine for those old days. The mall at 163rd did the same as Parkwood around the same time to become indoor from outdoor (I can't remember if it was when I moved to N Miami Beach in 79 or the next year in 1980. I never felt so excited at the prospect! Of course that is silly since I already knew of the WoodBridge huge indoor multi-level mall in NJ where I lived before that. I used to go visit malls in other states because I just loved them! This was so eerie and scary with the vandalism - some of what people wrote - so frightening!
Its just super depressing and nostalgic rather than creepy to me, im sure it has that haunted being watched feeling at least, but being 6 watching spongebob on cable then going to the mall at getting an xbox 360 in person is a nostalgic feeling i will never get back.
I worked at this mall in the 90's for about 3 years and in two different stories. The Diner that you went into was an Andy's Cheeseburgers and Cheese Steaks at that point, which was where I mainly worked. I also worked at a record store called Camelot Music. I spent hundreds and hundreds of hours in that mall at work and had friends who worked at many of the stores you toured. Growing up in Wilson we went there all the time when I was kid: Played at the arcade, shopped in the stores, got my haircut, and even got my first cell phone plan at the Radio Shack there. So wild to see it now.
OMG...I used to work at the Radio Shack in the late 90s until about 2001. I ate at that Andy's all the time and Catos was right beside us. This is wild. I had no idea this mall closed.
It's creepy how some stores are still attached and operating at these otherwise abandoned malls. I would certainty not like to shop or work at those places knowing there is an extremely dangerous, disused, dank post apocalyptic playground for drug addicts and the homeless to live and hang out in, just on the other side of some plywood boards.
I work at a mostly dead mall and honestly you just get used to it after a while. When somebody overdoses in the bathroom you just move on with your day
Get out of your cell phone life and look around, this is far from true creepy. You want creepy? go to a college campus and look around at all the social media addicts mainlining Sugar and Xtasy, all zombified by cell phone addiction and lack of human contact, strung out on a once impossible addiction, Marijuana. That's creepy!
If you are in the NYC area, specifically Long Island, check out the Source Mall, that a good example. Update: The Source Mall is actually now re-developed into Samanea with a 99 Ranch Supermarket in the back
I remember shopping in Denver's now abandoned and razed "Cinderella City" mall after all the anchors had vacated and there were just two or three small shops open in each hallway, to the point where sometimes you would be completely out of sight of an open store. Super creepy.
I must say that what was going through my mind seeing this empty mall was not all the merchandise or the memories of shopping, but rather about the people who used to work there, draw a paycheque and feed a family. I worked for a while in retail in my younger days. The pay was dismal, the hours long, but I did work with some pretty cool people. It was a stepping stone for me and I moved on, however there were some who paid their rent by working there. Where are they now?
@@dannygreen5477 because I’m Canadian, and that’s how we spell it. Kind of like colour for the hues of the rainbow instead of color as it’s spelled in the US. Sorry.
My best job I ever worked was at the mall, i work an office job now but my god it’s boring compared to how much fun I used to have working at the mall in retail.
So true. These buildings are like The Picture of Dorian Grey. We're deteriorating as a civilization but the malls are showing the age, sickness and neglect.
Question for the filmmakers: did you all actually hear the song “Relax” while exploring the mall? It sounds like it’s playing from a far-off speaker. If so, that adds a whole new level of creepiness.
Yes, I heard that too. I wonder if was coming from the one remaining open store, that only had access from the outside. It’s possible that it could be heard through the walled-over former mall entrance, if they were standing near there.
It was haunting. An 80’s song playing in an abandoned mall whose heyday way in the 80’s! It was like the mall’s “death rattle”. Clinging to life as it was breathing it’s last breath of air.
So many memories for many of us. It was another world back then. This is heartbreaking to see it like this, but at least we were there. I feel bad for these kids who have no idea why we feel such nostalgia for these places and times gone by. They were much happier times than now.
As a kid of the 80’s who went to the mall every weekend it’s sad. My local mall which had the same fate was demolished and on outdoor shopping complex was built which does well. At least before Covid Thank you for these videos
When I see these malls abandoned, I see so many memories abandoned with it: Christmas shopping, first jobs for teenagers, video arcade wins, buying LPs and cassettes. It's all those memories...left to die.
I always feel so sad when I watch the abandoned malls. I used to love browsing, shopping, eating within them. We still have them in the UK, but as so many shops have ceased trading over the past few years, they are not what they were. Neither are town centres for that matter. But the way these Malls were left always amazes me.
this reminds me of the mall in my city. the two biggest stores, macys and sears, closed many years ago but yet it’s still open. i don’t expect it to flourish again, but it’s sad. i have so many memories there from singing in my elementary choir to watching movies in the theater and having birthday parties. rip oviedo mall, even though you are not dead yet.
The death of malls make me sad. I always loved the in person shopping experience. I try and keep it that way. I feel like humans are just making life too accessible and too easy. There’s art to a mall.
I think I'm thankful to be living in an place (that being the Tampa Bay region) that still has thriving malls that are still being perused and shopped at every day of week. From watching all of the various abandoned mall videos across channels like yours and Dan Bell's, it always seems like when a population center dramatically shifts away from one area to another is when Malls begin struggling. At least here where I'm living, while housing and living costs are going up, that's because so many people and families and businesses are moving into town, I'm seeing places that were just grass fields for all of my childhood suddenly becoming new suburbs and apartments, heck my local mall now has a brand-new apartment complex right across the street from it so people living there could easily go and walk to the mall if they needed food or anything else. So the local malls in my area will remain relevant for years to come, it seems that malls in places where people are leaving or moving away seems to be the ones that eventually fall to a fate like this or just become erased for something new.
People use an area for 30 or 40 years. And then they want brand new sub divisions and malls. So they leave the older ones to just rot away. It’s pathetic and disgusting. Same trend keeps happening over and over. Where your mall is doing fine now, that will change.
Same here in Dallas, especially our high-end malls, like NorthPark, the Galleria and Stonebriar. NP was jam-packed at Christmas. I guess it's because they're destinations in themselves, and they offer so many great choices. It doesn't hurt that shopping is a major sport in Dallas. People-watching at NP is amazing. I looked like a hobo compared to most of the people in there.
I work security in a still pretty healthy mall. What you said about the quiet is true, they sound proof spaces really well. You can't even hear the music that plays in the common areas in the security office or service halls. It's honestly incredible.
I love these videos and they depress me so much missing my teenage years hanging out at a mall that no longer exists. I'm not even 40 and so much of my childhood/formative years is just gone already.
I'm a bit more than 50, same thing really, but I wonder whether these days it's become a process that seems to happen faster than it once did. A while ago I talked to a guy in his mid 20s, he said at school social fads came and went so fast, and now compared to current teens and whatever they're into, he already feels old. Such a strange thing. Referring to the home micro boom of the late 70s and 80s, he said he was kinda sad that he never got to see that, instead growing up during a time when computer tech, consoles, etc. were already established. It was an interesting point of view to hear. I think it's been made worse by a modern govt/media encouraged cultural shift toward regarding anything old as bad that should be replaced (often exploited for ideological reasons), while the nature of what people buy has changed to being products that many replace on an annual basis, everything from phones to furniture. It's an Ikea and iPhone world. Nothing is built to last, nothing persists, and so much is the same everywhere, hence not surprising perhaps that the activities in which people engage themselves become very transitory, there's not time to build up anything that can even become a "tradition" before the next fad has already arrived and shoved the old out of the way, regardless of whether it has any genuine merit (just whatever gets the most clicks & views). That at the homogenous nature of modern products means there's a sterility to what people do, less and less local variation. People just want page 43 from the Ikea catalogue, whereas I really like old furniture from the 1920s & 30s. Recently, dealing with a late relative's estate, I found it bizarre that an Ikea chest of drawers sold for considerably more than an almost century old chest of drawers which to my eye looked much nicer, and it was easier to find a buyer for the Ikea unit. Segwaying somewhat here but it's a related theme. I've read so many comments from those who say these malls were places where they hung out as children or teens. So what do such demographics do now? Where do they go? Or are they just stuck at home or on street corners, staring at phones or computer games? I'm glad I grew up in the 70s and was able in a more rural area to climb trees, fish in the river, roam the old quarry, etc.
Extremely nostalgic. My mother bought me my first bra from a Sears store, at Fashion Square Mall in Orlando, FL. I even worked at the same mall, years later, during Christmas season, when I was 15 yrs old. Lol. "Robinson's", which was bought out by Dillard's. Oh....the memories. Thank you for the stroll down memory lane.
WOW, you did a great job with the music because it creeped me out so bad when I saw this video a few days ago and didn't hear you mention it. I had to come back here and read through the comments just to have some closure lol Really well done and haunting as hell 🤯😂
My favorite way to spend the day was to go to the local Mall where all my favorite stores were under one roof. It's so terribly sad to see those glory days coming to a swift end. I see more and more deserted shopping mall buildings with the store logos stripped from the facings. It always makes me so sad... Online shopping is fast and convenient, but it doesn't compare with the excitement of SEEING AND TOUCHING the merchandise in person and the thrill of Holiday shopping. Thank you for posting this.
I love the research you've made and sprinkle tid bits of historical facts in the commentary. Most abandoned places TH-cam channel are just "hey look at this place" without any back story. Good job you've earned yourself a new subscriber
Man, I love places like this. Even if they're obviously closed to the public, I still find my way in. I train dogs for Urban Search and Rescue, and abandoned and decrepit facilities like this are perfect for training dogs for disaster response.
I thank you for your awesome service. I love that you do this - dogs love to work and have a purpose and they are so fantastic as service dogs and search and rescue and K9 cop dogs and explosives! They rock and so do you!
Thank you for this video. .I stumbled onto it by accident but it has special meaning to me because right after I graduated in 1984 from college (ECU) with an accounting degree, I took a job as a manager trainee at Roses. Had grown up about an hour from Wilson where this mall was located and when I accepted the job with Roses, ended up being placed at the Parkwood mall that is in your video. Retail was not really for me and only remained about 5 months before I moved on to a different job in banking but I did spend those five months at that mall and remember the various stores that were there at that time. But of course as your video indicated the mall went through a renovation several years after I left and a lot of the stores that I remember from my time there had changed or moved out. Even the Roses Store that I worked had gotten a full renovation and didn't look like it did when I worked there. Remember there being a restaurant called Something Different that was one of my favorite places to eat and there was also a K&W Cafeteria in that mall as well as a donut shop called Shelley's (sp), prounounced She-Lees, donuts. There was a JCPenney, the Roses and Belks Stores but I do not remember the Sears store being there at that time. It was my first experience working retail and it was amazing how well you get to know not only the people in the store that you work but the other Mall workers as well sort of like a family.
You should check out the American Dream Mall. Yeah it's had a rough and slow start to get filled up with stores but now WOW! Waterpark ,indoor skiing, Legoland, Aquarium, Ferris Wheel 2 miniature golf courses and so much more!
As a 15 yr old, I actually have active malls nearby me and me and my fam might go there sometime. Oaks Mall in Gainesville has a very high occupancy and knows what to do with areas, as well as keep it themselves up and running with the times. Vans and Hot Topic are right next to each other, and many different stores inside take up the entire place. Even when the Macy's shut down, Dillard's was able to make an exclusively Women's store on that same area later on.
@@thatgirl4429 "they"? You mean "I" since it's clearly about you and not other people. People like me and some others really like the mall or at least want to experience it. It may as well just be a teenager thing now lol.
I find it really sad that the malls are closing. Times are changing because people no longer go out & uave good times with their families and friends. Everyone is online. My best memories as a teenager is at the mall with friends. We shopped, had kunch, went to the arcade & movies. Teenagers today sit & spread & become almost catatonic on their phones.
I agree. kids rely too much on electronics. however, I'm wondering if a lot of the decline of the mall (besides online shopping) is people are kinda scared to venture out around a lot of people bc of all the mass shootings. could be. Its very sad.
not true , indoor malls use to be convenient because you could come and get all your essentials in one place , now it is more convenient to jus order from each of those stores online. Outdoor plazas & Boutique type stores are actually thriving , people shop in person now for the experience. People want to try on shoes , jeans, dresses etc especially expensive ones and they always will
Yes, true in so many ways. In the industry and how the corporate has everything set up (which someone here neglected to think about) it has caused allot of job losses. Everything online from buying to common communication with one another. We went from the physical world with all our 5 sense's to loose most of them by living on the web, evolving mentally backwards. You can't even Touch or Feel the product or ones emotions you may be communication with on the web many adore. Loosing touch with each other. Jobs are getting dropped yet are our prices of modern day living and it's basic needs balancing out with it?* The population is expanding as many got multiple baby mommas or daddy's (it IS the truth, do the research on human population and it's genetics of each and every individual, to much time and effort? I bet*) yet not enough job opportunities available to equal out as the concept of Greed took over with every advanced method discovered time and time again. They tell you eat McDonald's (in which you do) yet wonder why your sick later and can't afford the health problem that arrived years down the way. You did as you were told by the manipulation trick of ones mind.
I don’t think it’s sad. It’s just progress. People are online because for most people it really is better spent time. We are also much more connected to the rest of the world. We have greater ability to get correct. I think back in the day when malls were a bigger thing older people also complained that the kids are wasting time and money at the mall instead of spending time at school, playing sports, or working. All they do is spend spend spend. It’s a matter of perspective.
Even when open, Sears stores were rather scary in the last 20 years. The displays were old style, the floor plan never changed and the store furnishings were crappy and deteriorating.
Here in Las Vegas at the Meadows Mall Sears about 8 years back I bought a Craftsman stainless steel 20 oz. hammer with a beautiful blonde wood handle for only around $9. Total bargain for great American craftmanship! My four children were concerned why Dad purchased said hammer on our little shopping mall outing, but damn such a bargain and a tool that will last forever!
@@thespankdmonkey Sears had Craftsman Brand power tools. Still use a compact all steel table saw and a power jig saw that I bought in 1989- made in USA, still works, good value for the money. The brand was sold to black and decker I think.
Truly sad to see all these malls going away. Growing up in the age of the first malls was an awesome experience. Seeing that Pennys and Sears brings back so many memories of each August when momma would take us school clothes shopping. Back then we only got school clothes once a year and it was a very big deal. Thanks for the walk down memory lane. If you see a functioning mall still out there somewhere please go shop so they can stay open 😊
I'm not a bit surprised that the Roses is still open. I have one here in my town, and they have a very loyal fan base with the senior citizens, the folks who live deep in the country and the skirt wearing church goers/Pentecostal believers. The inside of that mall was apocalyptic. I would have had the heebie jeebies being in there. Great video!
My first job was working stockroom at Sears. My section stockroom was a strangely comforting place to be. I felt so at home there, big service elevator and all. When I no longer worked there, I'd sometimes go to the store and peer into the windows of the swinging stockroom doors. I no longer had access but it was like looking into a window back in time. About 15 years later that Sears was completely demolished, but that entire wing of the mall was rebuilt for another department store. That mall is still pretty busy.
This mall reminds me of my local mall. Our three anchor stores were JCPenney, Sears and Castner Knott (today it is a Dillard's). When my friends and I were between the ages of 13-15 (92-95), our mothers would drop us off here in the evening where we'd walk around until a late showing at the theater next door where we'd be picked up after watching a movie. Everything was so drastically different back then compared to today. I wouldn't change my youth and the time I was raised for anything in the world! To anyone in that age bracket who may be reading this; cherish every moment, make lots of friends and have fun! Once your youth is gone, it's gone for good. There will be no going back to change anything so enjoy it while you can.
These malls seemed magical as a kid, especially during the holiday seasons with all the Christmas decorations up, such vibrant childhood memories. These videos aren’t so much creepy to me as they are outright depressing.
agreed
Yeah. That’s where we went as young kids to see Santa clause and as teenagers to meet girls. A time when social interaction was the norm. Maybe the next billionaire in waiting will be the one who finds a way for people to come out and be social in person again.
Time to come out of Babylon, Fam!
Yep. These malls were the place EVERYONE would go to, no matter your social or monetary standing. Even if you didn't want to buy anything (except maybe some grub from the food court) you were welcome there to hang out or window shop. Friends, family, solo... didn't matter. No cost to get in except gas or physical exertion to walk there if you lived close. That's why I'll always have extremely fond memories of these indoor malls, and why I just can't feel the same about modern venues that are micro-monetized to hell and back.
I totally agree!👍
Back in the day, going to malls was such an amazing experience. It's hard to see it like this.
Indeed, I remember being able to spend nearly a whole day at the mall looking at the shops, granted, back in the 80's and 90's there was a wider variety of stores to peruse and lose yourself in......not to mention the arcades :)
That said it's still bizarre to me that this is happening, not the changes to the retail sector in the wake of online shopping, but rather, that decently solid structures with existing utilities and quite a bit of available space (both inside AND outside) are just being allowed to.......decay into ruin instead of finding new life.
Yeah, while low rent housing is one possibility I'm not sure if the surrounding areas economy would support that plan or not......and let's face it......if that mall were rebuilt into low rent housing it'd probably be bought up by one of those creepy faceless corporations that keep calling to ask us if we want to sale our homes.
I remember going to Montgomery Ward and playing Nintendo 64 while parents were shopping 🛒 Now it is different times
A museum into the past ....thanks for this video sure did enjoy that nostalgia feeling.
@Patrick Brannon Huh, hadn't heard about them buying apartments.....though if they're pricing out the current renters......I wonder what % of their apartment properties are actually being rented out as opposed to standing empty.
Like so many of those storefronts in New York City.
@Patrick Brannon pure evil
What’s crazy to me is how many hours and memories customers and employees logged here. How many friendships were made between coworkers, lunch breaks at their favorite spots, jittery first day of school shopping for kids and mall walking routines for the elderly. And now it’s all reduced to a pile of moldy rubble.
My junior prom was held in a semi-abandoned mall, right in front of a shuttered JC Penny’s. It was fantastically creepy. I think that’s where my love of dead and dying malls began.
All those memories.
🤟😔
NOTHING lasts forever here on earth. Who would've thought, just 15 years ago, that Sears would now be history??!!!
@@archangelliii2536 I know a Sears store was the last anchor store to close at all three of the Columbus, Ohio malls I grew up with in the 80's and 90's: Northland, Eastland, and Westland.
Your excellent comment shows why we as a society need to question whether the smart phone and internet society we have created is really a good thing. There are values much higher than convenience.
Love your comment about hours and memories its so true and your junior Prom sounds really cool!
Some of my fondest memories from middle school were getting dropped off at the mall with my friends. We felt sooo grown up that our parents would let us shop without them at the mall. We would eat at the food court, hit up all the best stores, and then use the pay phone to call our parents to come get us. What a time!
Same here I grew up in the mid 90s
I feel sorry for American kids they have so little independence. At that age me and my mates would catch Trains to different cities and go on backpacking holidays alone. You can just ,walk , cycle, buss anywhere you dont need your parents to drive you.
I like America but living there before you are old enough to drive would be very limiting.
Of course you don’t the USA is a massive and still has large areas that aren’t even populated. Hence we need a car just to get to house to a store. In Europe you guys are compacted and ran out of room. Of course you can take trains and bounce to cities. Tell ‘me you don’t realize how vast and massive the USA is without telling me you don’t know. Your comment alone tells me you don’t have any concept on how large the USA is.
Yes, we would hit the arcade, get a slice of pizza from Sbarro's, and we always used the pay phones to call our parents. Good times!
I grew up in this area and grew up during Parkwood Mall’s heyday. It’s so heartbreaking to see a critical part of my childhood in such bad shape. Thank you for doing this video. I have so many memories there. Keep up the great work. Stay safe.
Yes indeed. Everything is Amazon or Walmart etc. -- online stores which are convenient but local stores should be used too.
@@dalhousieDream Well, retail will always be a thing. I work in hardware retail and trust me, most of the big stuff cant be done online. Beacuse usually its FUBAR by the time it gets to your doorstep! Even my stores online delivery (handled by 3rd party) sent some poor guy a mangled tool chest.
@Safwaan F-ed up beyond all recognition. It's an acronym
@@tylerrusnak7736 ah thanks for that. Now to use FUBAR around the house as much as I can to annoy the kidults🤪
Your comment moved me deeply, Charlie! You just described exactly what I feel. Though I didn't grow up in that area and never really heard of that Mall.. but when looking at abandoned and devastated places scattered around the world, we are reminded of how quickly paint cracks and peels, and people, too, grow old and fade away. At times we just look back at places from the past, and what we have is just a handful of living, breathing memories..
Having work 11 years as mall maintenance I can honestly say that the amount of scrap and recyclable material in these buildings is phenomenal. Stores moved out and left a lot. Printers, shelving, stationary, vacuums, cctv, sound systems and speakers. Not to mention the amount of copper wiring, stainless steel, and metal that is recyclable.
A store moved out and I would be tasked to demo it for an incoming store. I cashed in instead of putting things in the landfill. After 10 years i still have metal beams and posts, carpet, tiles, shelving, and hardwood seating benches I still use.
We'd make thousands on copper alone.
Good for you L.D. they were going to waste it, and you made use of it. Some people have too much, and dont appreciate it
A business "controller" comes from accounting, not maintenance. As long as the numbers look good, recycling and upcycling is an unnecessary expense. Hooray Capitalism!!
Blue collar humans can appreciate the things that gave them callouses. White collar humans avoid labor because it would mean scheduling an extra trip to the nail salon this week.
Look up Goodhart's Law. It will explain why capitalism has failed good, hardworking Americans - ALL Americans, regardless of ethnicity.
@@michaeldelio1870 Now that I've rambled, please let me make it up to you all by coming back around and pointing out how the central bank of our country reduced copper in pennies about 40 years ago to save on the cost of making pennies on behalf of the Treasury. The people own the treasury but a privately owned bank prints the currency we call "money", thereby devaluing the pennies it complains of having to make.
As a child of the 80’s the Shopping mall was such a great memory of my childhood. My mom passed away from brain cancer recently and as I look back at the happy times with my amazing mom, there were SO many at the mall, Christmas shopping, school clothes shopping , going to the mall as a family because it was free and my family didn’t have money we had so much fun just running around there. It’s so sad to see them closing! I’m greatful I’ve been able to take my Angel daughters to a local mall here that’s somehow still afloat. Sad to see them closing and stores like JC penny that were a staple of my childhood with my mom. 😢
I’m so sorry. May your mom rest in peace, I’m sure you two had so much fun in these places as did I. God bless your heart and merry Christmas!!🎄🎁
m z's mom really went like: 💀
Sorry for your loss 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
:( Bless you
I went there from 8ps.till 2010 when closed sad see how it went down hill and so much could had been done to this mall
Honestly, the saddest part of this is that these perfectly good buildings are being left to rot. That’s so wasteful. They could easily be turned into something else. I’ve always thought of what if they could be used as some sort of super homeless shelters with food, beds, doctors, schooling, etc. to get people back on their feet.
i currently live in wilson, and pass by this mall all the time and went to it . Its sad to see it rot but they fear to destroy it because of "Asbestosis". There's also homeless ppl that are in the area living in or near the mall. My friends went to explore the other day, the mall is beyond repair.
I think much of the reason why these malls haven't been converted into large homeless centers is because I believe our government wants these people to suffer by letting nature and the elements kill them off. Large numbers of homeless people lowers property values. So you just know that they're not going to allow that to happen!
There was a serial killer recently who was going all around in various areas of New York City targeting homeless people. One of them was even in his sleeping bag asleep when he was doused in gasoline, then set ablaze. But as soon as heard about these murders on television, my initial thought was, "that's no serial killer... that's the work of hired hit men"
Similar happened in London some years back when abnormally increased numbers of homeless people were all dying from overdoses. Someone was moving some bad heroin around on the streets, and a lot of it. A suspect was eventually taken into custody. During his interro gasoline, he told investigatiors that some prominent people within the city and police department made him distribute this tainted heroin. I don't know all the details as to how he came into contact with these people, but it sounds like he was definitely a patsie. One who thy might have given him 2 choices - community service. Or prison for a crime he was about to be charged with, but would be swept under the rug upon chosing to do community service. And just as I mentioned before, the intended purpose was to thin out the numbers, then let property values increase back their market rates.
i don't think there was ever an update as to what came of it all in the future. But if that could happen in a city like London, then it can happen here in the US as well. There is no love for the homeless in the US
@@Hammy750 agreed, people may think these places could be used but in reality they're full of dangerous chemicals as well as water damage and mold.
I just don't see how the city allows them to rot away when they will come after us if we don't mow our lawn for a week.
The amount of money needed to facilitate that facility for that, will make the buyers homeless.
You'd think they'd convert these places into apartment complexes instead of building new ones. I know people in my home province who converted several old run down stores, strip malls, and even an entire stadiums for other uses; apartments, warehouses, etc. One convenience store/video rental place I used to go to all the time as a kid was eventually repurposed into an apartment complex (and a pretty well priced one at that, considering they kept the attached laundromat).
Although, go look up Memorial Stadium Dominion in St. John's, Newfoundland if you want a more famous example; its an old hockey arena repurposed into a grocery store!
Sears has a special place in my heart and I am devastated to see their demise. They helped to pay for my education through a fund they founded after my dad passed away so I am forever grateful for them and everything they did to help our family during such a heartbreaking time.
Back in the day they delivered a rifle straight toy grandpa's door.
Eddie Lampert doesn't care about Sears or it's workers. It's sad.
@@tampabaybuccaneer10 In Canada the executives gutted the employee’s pension plan. Staff who contributed from their own paycheques for years were left with nothing when they were laid off. CRIMINAL!
@@tampabaybuccaneer10 it's so sad! I worked for Kmart when I was 17 and didn't even recognize the place when I went back years later before they closed that location.
@@Gr3nadgr3gory they delivered HOUSES!
Jake, I always appreciate how respectful you are towards the buildings and the items left in them, as well as your reminders of how they were once part of the community.
My Dad was a Sears store manager back in the 70s, 80s and 90s. I basically grew up in malls. I can remember going to work with him on Sunday mornings as he would open the store and being able to sprint the shiny linoleum floors the with nothing but the security lights reflecting off the surfaces. The distinct smells of the varying departments from the rich, scented perfume isle to the smell of leather shoes and the rich odor of brand new rubber emanating from the tires of pristine, brand new snowblowers and tractor mowers (which I also got to sit on - a HUGE treat) I honestly kind of hate these video. Yes, they are infinitely fascinating to see the decay of bygone years - but to me, as a someone in my mid to late 40s they represent the feeling of watching a symbol of my youth rot into dust.
Abandoned places are depressing
@@usernames68619they are full of old ghosts who roam around the property
My grandpa used to be a manager for Sears in the 60s and 70s
When I was a kid, our town was small, so we only had a catalog store to pick up orders. It was a treat to get to go to the big Sears in another town. At Christmas time, they had a huge toy department. I loved it. Years later, my husband and I bought a lot of the things for our daughter’s nursery there because they carried Winnie the Pooh merchandise.
@@DBlake864I remember growing up the big Sears and JCPenney even JC Whitney catalogs😊
I can't imagine what it would be like to have been a long time employee at places like this, working years or possibly decades and see what all that dedication ultimately lead to. All that time, all the missed plans, all the picked up shifts, all the stress over sales quotas, all the 'I can't I have to go to work'. All that to see that time amounting to this. Sobering.
When Sears shut in Canada it was found the executives had gutted the employee’s pension plan and the staff was left with nothing! Even the money they had contributed themselves!
@@tomrogers9467 that’s horrible
@@tomrogers9467 Wow what a nightmare. Sadly that's not surprising.
True sobering... I think that should gives us a lesson about not stressing over everything and that nothing is permanent.
@@tomrogers9467 really that’s terrible
As someone who was born in 1982, seeing you walk through these old malls that are frozen in time and look just like the mall that I used to go to every week with my mom and grandma as a kid what I feel is ... Hard to describe, it's like ... Sadness mixed with nostalgia 😢😢😢😢
I was also born in 1982 and can totally relate to your feelings.
I graduated HS in 82 so I've seen my share of malls around the Country. I simply don't see a need for them anymore. I do 90% of my shopping online like most
@@michaelt3308 shopping online made us lazy and shuttered from the outside world. I worked customer service for 13 years so I’m comfortable talking to strangers, that itself is becoming rare after the whole COVID nightmare.
@@AvenueD417 Agree to a point. Been in sales 40 yrs so talking and interacting with others is not an issue. You don't need a mall for social interaction. But Social Media and the internet has definitely dumbed us down and made society socially awkward IMO. ( I'm not so sure this was done unintentionally)
I know exactly what you mean, I too was born in 1982. Malls actually ment and represented something to us as kids.
It’s always sad to see these abandoned places. So much money and materials are used for them.
Yes and all these new structures being built when businesses could take existing ones over
@@mmfrogi That's the real tragedy. Taking more natural land away to build Amazon Warehouses and housing when abandoned malls on huge plots of land exist.
Fuck Amazon!
@@Michael-zf1ko All about money. Costs way too much to clear land like that, especially if its a massive abandoned mall.
@@mmfrogi it's cheaper to build a new building than to renovate some piece of crap building that's been forgotten
This mall is actually in my hometown of Wilson, North Carolina. It definitely was the cornerstone of our small community of 50,000+ in its hayday. Eventually a new shopping center across town was erected and that kind of led to the death if Parkwood. As of literally yesterday, the City Council has purchased it and plans to demolish it and build a new shopping development. Hate to see it go but i'm glad that my hometown is going to get some new life. Thanks for this video. I'm sure those in my hometown will enjoy this.
I wonder how bad the Kroger over across it is looking inside
I'd like to see either an indoor go kart track or maybe RC track.
heyday
I knew this place looked familiar so close to home sadly
um the city council did not buy your tax dollars bought it without anyone voting on it
Spending a great deal of my youth, (teens) wandering the local Malls, every time I watch one of these videos, I realize that the death of a Mall is in reality, portrays a little death of my youth.
I don't think people bought too much. They kind of just hung out and walked around.
Yep, we're old buddy.
Don't look back. Look to the future! "For, behold, I create new heavens and a new earth: and the former shall not be remembered, nor come into mind" (Isaiah 65:17, KJV).
@@davidlafleche1142 Is it "the lion and the lamb" or is it "the wolf and the lamb"?
I challenge you to look this up in your oldest, most personal Bible.
You may be surprised at what you see, and how that compares to what you thought you knew.
Then ponder the implications of the conundrum before you.
@@nicholasbstone Here are the references:
"The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them" (Isaiah 11:6).
"The wolf and the lamb shall feed together, and the lion shall eat straw like the bullock: and dust shall be the serpent's meat. They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain, saith the Lord" (Isaiah 65:25).
Okay, what about them?
This just made me feel old! I was an 80s mallrat and I'm now nostalgic for the days of arcades and Saturdays with friends.
Yes Sir me 2 those was the days! Saturday mornings cartoons and arcades..
The local malls used to be great places to go for unusual items.
Now you can sit behind a computer and shop the world.
But it was a special time nonetheless.
Best times ever! One of my first jobs was with Circus World toys in North Valley Mall in Thornton Colorado (one of the few still standing in Denver, all though repurposed along time ago).
@@tbury2516 Sweet memories of that mall and those times, also of Cinderella City in Englewood and Buckingham Mall in Aurora.
@@waterheaterservices Cinderella City was the best! Don't forget Villa Italia, Westminster Northglenn, Southglenn and Southwest Plaza.
The Gateway Mall in Springfield, Oregon saved itself from this fate by literally turning itself inside out. Originally an indoor mall, it was remodeled to make most of the stores outward-facing, becoming a glorified strip mall with a theater anchoring the small remaining indoor section. While abandoned places are fascinating, I think places that narrowly avoided abandonment are even more fascinating.
I was thinking that the mall could've been saved if it went back to an open concept. Prior reading your message.
We had a small enclosed mall that eventually opened up into an outside shopping venue only to have it enclosed again.
New investors reopened it and made it like a little Main St promenade. Been like that ever since and is busier than heck with restaurants, movie theaters, retail and grocery stores
I doubt it saved itself. Like all malls, it's living on borrowed time, especially with gas price gouging. Are you really going to drive to the mall 5 miles away when you're paying $6 a gallon for gas?
Last week I had to drive through Upstate New York and drove through Poughkeepsie, NY. I thought the South Hills Mall would have the same fate as the Dutchess Mall in nearby Fishkill. Dutchess was torn down and replaced with a Home Depot and some adjacent stores to the left of it are abandoned and decaying with a large parking lot with weeds growing through cracks. South Hills Mall became like Gateway as a newly renovated outdoor plaza with At Home furniture, Burlington, Hobby Lobby, Bob's Discount furniture, Christmas Shops, ShopRite grocery, etc.
South Hills Mall was an unusual story that really enjoyed the 1980s and declined by the end of the decade when a much larger Poughkeepsie Galleria would open in 1987. It didn't have a food court so in 1985 developers built a cool, modern addition with high ceilings and the majority was glass-enclosed. It was all mid-1980s styling with art deco glass blocks, curvy long neon lights hanging from the ceiling and walls in red, blue, yellow and magenta. It was the first food court ever in the county area and had Panda Express type Chinese food place too. Strangely, during a college break in 1992, I worked a short gig in construction and on my first day I saw that the whole food court addition was demolished, and a large store was being built in its place, Service Merchandise. The small, new food court was dismal and depressing with four corner food shops.
That's so smart. I avoid mall be cause I HATE walking to get to what I need. My back injury makes it hard. If I can get in and out, I'd be happy.
Sad to see what happened to Sears. It used to be the biggest retail store in America, selling just about anything you could want, including houses.
What goes up must come down..
Sears sucked glad they are GONE!
@@scottr3484actually, it’s the opposite 🤓
@@scottr3484Damn, Mr. Happy...bet you're a load of fun to have around.
4:08
Strange to see. Those types of malls were very much how we viewed America during the 70s and 80s, on TV shows and movies. In fact, in Britain we copied them to some degree. Now they are closing on both sides of the Atlantic.
@Andy Wylde Malls in NYC are still doing fine. At least in Queens & Long Island.
I love ruins of all types: Anasazi ruins, Salton Sea, and old abandoned malls and shops where people were so happy to get a job, where lots of emotions were felt. The person who removed the Flowers sign and put it on a shelf. Were they the last out the door? Were they the owner who was so proud on the day the shop opened years ago?
It really does make you think about it ...ruins of the 20th century laying in silence.
You may want to check out the album "A Farewll to Kings"...from 1977. The Album cover will draw you in, and expose you to a profound musical journey of a fallen civilization.
I always think about that too. What was the story there. Especially abandoned run down houses and stuff. Were once brand new and someone moved in, to now. What kind of history and stories took place
Steely Dan or maybe it's just Fagen does a song about the last mall in America. On the Everything Must Go album. Came out maybe ten years ago. Would be a great background score for this creepy yet interesting film.
Check out some Prothean ruins
I lived in Wilson most of my life. That Rose's used to be the Belks, my grandmother worked there for years as the switchboard operator. Our school chorus used to set up bleachers infront of the Belks for a Christmas performance because they would always doll the store entrance up with garland and lights for the holidays. The KB toy store used to be next to the Flowers shoe store. I still to this day have a card in my wallet from one of the jewelry stores that gives me lifetime battery replacement in my watches. On the day of my Grandmothers funeral I found a tear in the pants of my suit and stopped into the JCPenny to get a new suit in a hurry. It's weird cause I can watch your video and tell you almost where every store used to be.
A family friend was the voice of Sears in our local mall; we could often hear her pre-recorded ads over the PA system. She's recently passed away but I think she used to run the switchboard as well. I remember the 2nd floor entrance was for the catalog pick-up! MANY years ago (we're talking at least 45) there was a cafeteria at Sears my mom and I used to go to before we went shopping! My three-year-old self loved the chocolate pudding, lol. I worked at See's Candies several Christmases and there were many musicians and choirs that used to perform, it was fun to get to listen to them. Ah, good times.
Your comment is a good example of why the posts below YT videos should be preserved, and why YT should not be able to delete them and especially not erase entire channels. People are creating a new archive of memory, a way of recording what was and what it meant to those who lived through such times. I wish YT videos included a "download all comments" button.
Thankyou both for taking the time to write, such personal recollections I find fascinating.
Something intrigues me: in the video where he says the number of visitors to the mall began to decline, what would you say were the primary causes of this? Bound to be more than one factor at work I expect.
Same here my friend.
Where was this?
@@Hakysak89 Wilson, North Carolina. Small town east of Raleigh.
It’s sad to see malls replaced with online shopping. I’m glad I was born at a time when I got to experience mall shopping, especially during the holidays. We have a mall here in Victorville California and there is so much theft and violence, I’m almost positive our mall will be shutting the doors soon. The next generations will never know the fun of shopping at the mall.
two favorite places at the mall that I like have to be Game stop and the arcade.
Some malls will still be around
What’s the name of the mall
@@truckvlogs1346 & the food court.🌮🍕🍔
@@gregoryhagen8801 that’s a good place
Up until the late 70’s, I believe, SEARS was the largest retailer in the world. And now, it’s a shell of itself. But, then again, as a kid I remember the lunch counters at Grant’s and Woolworth.
High interest rates don't help.
Ah yes the lunch counter at Woolworth, loved the orange drink fountain
Yup and don't forget Montgomery Ward.
Boycott walmart
I loved Woolworth and their restaurant too - Harvest House!
As someone who would go to malls when I was a little kid in the 2000s, it's sad to see malls go out of business.
And that was just at the start of the death of malls.
Same bro. I'm lucky that the mall of my childhood is still thriving but it certainly isn't the same for many others.
LOL, the 2000s is when the demise of American shopping malls began. Try being a kid in the 80s and 90s like I was. That was the PRIME shopping mall era.
@@jrwheeler81
True, but my mall was still pretty busy around 2009 to 2012.
Watching arcades go into decline after the recession of 2007 and the dissolve of video stores from social media is a bitter pill to swallow.
I remember when I used to go to the malls. So bright and full of life... people everywhere and purchasing.
It's so sad.
It's the state of our economy. Everything is plain to see, you can't hide what us going on.
Deteriorated places will never not fascinate me. If those decaying walls could talk, imagine all the stories they’ve heard. A women coddling her crying toddler, a couple arguing, a couple having their first kiss, a man eating a comfort pretzel in a food court because his child is terminally ill. Deteriorated places that once bustled with life and purpose feel whimsical not because the buildings are echoes of what they once were, but rather the walls themselves are aching for company once more.
If those walls could talk it would be creepy as f*ck!
@@Frankie5Angels150 but spy balloons are not....LOL
stupid 😒
Iv never heard it said better
Why is this comment so beautiful to me?
Wow as someone who's old 65+ it's weird to see all the old shopping malls just being abandoned and left to rot in northern Ohio we have several malls that have closed and sit like idle dinosaurs that are prime real estate that could be redeveloped into something else. The same thing with old amusement parks. !!!
Live about an hour from Columbus! And yeah it's really sad to see the malls being left to rot. I'm a skateboarder and I always thought to turn them into giant indoor parks. Just such a waste of space. Fun fact by the way, Ohio has the most abandoned malls in the country! Maybe the world but I'm not sure.
I’m 35 and live around Cincinnati. Growing up there were several malls around here but the only one that’s left is Kenwood. The rest are mostly abandoned. There’s an Eastgate mall on the East side that’s about 25% occupied but it’s dying slowly. So sad what’s happened to Ohio, on purpose at that. Our factories, industry, malls, have all been shut down and closed. We ended up with heroin and drugs in its place.
@@Johnnyboi1986 Yeah I always feel bad about the heroin flooding the state. I saw reports that it was coming through PA from Newark, NJ. NJ is my home state. Sad...
@@robshnob123 yep, most people probably know someone who’s overdosed and died at this point around here. It’s infuriating, because many of us have realized it’s not on accident. I will say, having the amount of abandoned malls we do, they are cool to explore. There’s a mall nearby called Cincinnati Mills that has 1 store left in it, there are some vids of it on YT, it’s a neat place. There are buckets every 10 feet it seems like to catch leaks. Pretty run down but still has that modern look. I checked it out about a month ago.
I’m 22 and didn’t live through this I feel like an old soul sometimes like my soul craves genuine things not just social media fake stuff but when I was a teen my dad found a mall like this we went in to buy some school shopping like clothes and shoes and it was almost empty inside I loved it because I don’t like being around much people and it was so nice in there it was huge and it looked bigger since barely anyone was there. I honestly thought it was the coolest thing and probably a year later I remembered the mall and told my dad to take me there and it was getting destroyed I felt so sad and thought to myself that I was weird for caring to much over an old mall but I couldn’t stop the feeling of sadness and dread of modern malls but now that I see this video and many people feel the same I understand now why I felt that way.
FULL CIRCLE! You have no idea how wild this is for me and my fiancé, we started urban exploring BECAUSE of your videos! Wilson Mall was our first UX site! The Bath & Bodyworks tiles were bending upwards from the water damage, Crazy to see how they look now. Only a few popped up, seeing that many of them loose is crazy. Dont remember as many plants, but I definitely remember all the mold, super bad. Bummed the mannequins I set near the exits arent there anymore tho....
This is absolutely crazy, thanks for visiting and thanks for giving us a update to the damages!!
I wouldn't poke around in abandoned buildings. Who knows who you might run in to.
Happy hunting on your UX escapades! If a random stranger on the internet can make a small request, could you please leave things as you found them? Particularly if they seem to be where they were. While it's always amusing to have an "I am Legend" moment seeing a group of mannequins randomly standing around, it's always much cooler to see things as they were when the building was abandoned. Thanks, and stay safe!
This actually made me really sad. As an 80’s kid, I spent my formative years in malls.
That being the case, it got me wondering what kids do these days instead to socialise, where do they go? Or they just staring at phone screens?
@@mapesdhs597 - As the father of a teenager, I can assure your that 95% of their free time is spent on their phone. Even when together, right next to each other, they text instead of talk.
@@billybeemus3929 I know. I guess it helps keep them out of trouble....
@@oldiesmusic76 - I said "free time". You can't control someone 24 hours per day. If you try, make sure you have saved up for your kids therapy sessions first. they will need it.
I used to work at Lenox Sq. Mall in the early '90s at B.Dalton Bookstore. I loved it, except for some folks wandering in to beg for money, steal and show off body parts to others. Now, with shootings, looting, robberies, and ripping off customers as they walk to their cars, the stores are closing up their doors and/ or moving elsewhere. It's not just the Internet's fault anymore.
It's so crazy that these buildings can't be repurposed for something useful. it's so sad that they are just sitting abandoned and empty.
They do get repurposed. These are multimillion dollar structures & property. Our community has taken the local mall & totally deconstructed it to outdoor shopping, senior living & a park & movie theatre.
@@lucyterrier7905 that is awesome. But there are still a lot that are sitting vacant. They should all be repurposed like this and turned into low income housing.
@@Jah_LEASE_yah buildings like this are expensive to redevelop, with mold, asbestos (depending on age) among other disrepair
I have no idea how you guys got in here. I live an hour from Wilson and have tried getting in to this mall and 99% of the time homeless people are at all entrances and everything is nailed shut. There's also cops that are driving around constantly. The best I've been able to do is take pictures through a window. I've always wanted to be able to explore inside, guess videos will have to suffice.
No reply with answer shocker !
He may have secured special access.
Jake has connections!
@@Bluecewe That's my assumption. Even still, pretty crazy that they'd still give him access given how dangerous these places can be.
I've watched in a different video channel they usually get like a special clearance.
Got to wonder what it's like to be a worker at that Roses, literally having a massive abandoned and deteriorating space just on the other side of the back wall of the store. Probably don't think much of it, but crazy nonetheless. Great video!
I never heard of Roses department store. But I'm sure nobody heard of Harris's in San Bernardino area. We had our senior photos taken there.
Same with the JCP Outlet that was at Rolling Acres
@Carol Harris: I not only heard of Harris’, but I used to work there in the Book Dept! Does that make me nobody? 😜😀
@@carolharris2357 Roses is actually a discount store like KMart and Walmart we have had them in Florida for decades. I thought it was weird that they would be an anchor store.
@@scotsmith2391 there is a Rose's as an anchor store in the Sumter Mall (Sumter, SC). The other two anchors are Belk and JCP
The excitement of the Mall on a Saturday was priceless for us as kids.
Going to GameStop/EB Games, and if it was a good work week for mom (online sales pre-amazon era) it also meant stopping at Subway for lunch.
Queens Mall in Queens, New York is still pretty nice.
@@Damone7653 I think NYC is so BIG (as in population) that malls can still survive (I went to Kings Plaza in Brooklyn on a visit there and it was packed). But I think that when you see the dynamic in medium sized places in North America, malls are going the way of the dinosaur (I say "medium sized" because the mall where I grew up in Marathon Ontario is still around-but it is basically the shopping centre to go to for 100sqkm or more)
I was born in 1953, only one mall near me as a kid, named Randhurst near north west Chicago. It was really magical going there, especially at Christmas time. Other places like Golf Mill were a series of separate stores close together with covered walkways between them. Then later converted into a huge mall. Then the mammoth mall Woodfield was built in Schaumburg IL. These places were so special. A real experience to go to. Now, we just do this on line and wait for a delivery. Really sad. What will a person like you, be filming 50 years from now ?
Being somebody who works at a mid to high level for a small retail chain that JCPenney was actually pretty sad to see. 50 years, and you could tell it was a beautiful store when it was operating. The way the light came through.
It reminds me of how sad the employees were when the Kmart that was open for 45 years near me closed. One of the oldest ladies had worked there since it opened and was crying on the final day, the way she kept referring to the store as “my Kmart” and hearing about how she remembered every remodel and reset made it quite heartbreaking actually. It was a GEM among Kmarts too, the employees put a lot of effort into keeping it nice even in its final years with no help from corporate.
I think people assume that all retail people hate their jobs, but a real family does develop in these places and a store closing does feel like a genuine sad loss when you’ve worked there for years with the same crew of familiar faces.
Whoever ran this place probably was heaven sent because people normally leave in a little bit time
So true I work at Kmart to I think it's sad when all the good retail stores closed and all these people loose their jobs. Things are already bad enough the government doesn't care about how Some of these elderly people are going to make it.
For real, similar to leaving a nostalgic class on the last day feeling
It depends on who works in the management
Retail and fast food workers over the age of 25 are some of the most dedicated individuals. So kind and happy all the time too. I’m convinced people who take that life path are old souls because they’re so content with what they have. God bless them.
Before my Sears met it’s demise it was like stepping back in time to the 1980’s! It literally was the mall’s time capsule. They never did a thing to update their brand or their stores or anything. Once Craftsmen sold out to China that was it for me. Going into Sears for me in the end days was like going to visit a old friend I haven’t seen in years that was successful and had the world by the balls, only to find him living in a trailer park wearing a nasty bathrobe and slippers, greasy unkept hair and a five o’clock shadow reeking of Marlboro cigarettes.
"Once Craftsmen sold out to China that was it for me." Yep! Why pay 3x more when I can get a chinese tool at Harbor Freight???
@@h.mandelene3279 Because I am willing to pay the extra amount for tools and other items that won’t fall apart. I purchased two sets of ratchet wrenches from Lowes..both Craftsman. Went to use one of them on a nut on my vehicle, applied very minimal pressure and it fell apart.
What blew my mind was. Sears already had the infrastructure to do what Amazon went on to dominate in. But, for whatever reason the powers that be decided not to pursue that and therefore refused to evolve and adapt and.. well You see what happened with Sears.
I wish I could remember the name of the Particular CEO
@@htennek1 exactly… I can’t remember what the CEOs name was either but he ran seers into the ground on purpose. I guess they were done with it and in the end just decided to MoveOn. But they could’ve moved the catalog online closed all their brick and mortar stores and competed directly with Amazon. Why they didn’t is completely beyond me. They should’ve done away with their clothes in the late 70s and focused on appliances tires electronics and stuff like that. But like I said they just got to the point where I think they just didn’t give a shit anymore.
@@joelynott7360 The CEO's name was Eddie Lampert.
Glad you had someone with you! I can only imagine how creepy that would be traveling through alone!
I’m a 2000s kid, so I didn’t grow up in the era of malls, but I have found memories of my grandmother taking me to the mall in Muncie, Indiana. The Muncie Mall is slowly dying now, with Sears, JCPenny, Macy’s, and Carson’s closed, and it is sad to see, because my dad grew up hanging out there, but now it’s just a few stores left.
I bought the very first Caboodle (cosmetic storage bin) they ever made at Sears before heading to college. I have a Sears branded mini blowdryer I also bought in the late '80s and it STILL WORKS! Sears was a staple in the 1980s. It was never a "sexy" store, but you could always rely on it for necessities. And who else grew up with the Sears Dream Book catalog? That book was what childhood dreams were made of. 😁 R.I.P. Sears. You were much loved.
Time to make malls popular again. They were way more fun than online shopping.
Too dangerous today, people like to do crazy things. I'm good with online shopping.
So true, you could actually look at something before you bought it. Exchanges were easier as they were done in store and not by having to post something back to the realtor and you got out amongst people.
Disagree. Malls are an ugly part of our history in the 70s and 80s when we thought abandoning the historic/culturally rich downtown areas in lieu of building bland big box stores in the suburbs was the "future". Thank god, these fads have faded into irrelevance as city centers are gaining favor again.
@@agoo7581 I’d agree with you but we still have big box stores consistently growing such as Target, Walmart, and Best Buy.
@@agoo7581 Now we have an ugly gigantic parking structure to replace ours because there is hardly any parking around these little businesses that where once in a mall
I miss shopping malls as a child....especially during Holliday seasons
The music on the overhead speakers
All the decorations
Socks it's now just a distant memory.....
As a kid back in the 70s and 80s a trip to the mall was an event, and they were always packed! Incredible how things have changed!
I REALLY miss the malls of the 90s, I grew up in the arcades, eating hot "mall pretzels", hanging out with my friends, going the movie theaters and even shopping at Hot Topic in my mid teens. The mall was THE place you went to find anything you needed and a place for you to hang out with friends. With how everything else from the 80s and 90s seemingly coming back, I REALLY wish malls would see a revival as well.
This type of malls looked so futuristic! Thats why i love them.
@@left4speed519 I know right, a lot of malls like this one always had this sort of futuristic look to them, as if you were traveling somewhere new everytime you walked through the doors.
I miss it so much
Yeah man, those were the days. We are now the old guys saying “things were better when i was your age”
@@luxthedopestar9073 Dude, I know. I'll be talking to my son about something and he will laugh and poke fun at me by going "Yeah, back in my day in 1892..." I'm like Im not THAT damn old yet.....lol.
These always hit me in the feels, it's crazy to see things from my childhood in shambles. Love what you do and keep it up!!!!
It's tough. I'm almost 40 and I feel like I've gone through stages of this! 😫🤣
I remember losing our Toys-R-Us. I remember losing Eastwood Mall where my Mom, granny, me and my sister would go walking in. I remember losing or 3rd important mall - Century Plaza...
All early 90s on.
I've moved on, travelled the country as a nurse... But certain stores, staples of my youth - get me in the feels 💕
Corporate stores have you in your feelings... Some people...
@@ocoolwow no.
My childhood memories of family, friends and holidays do.
Take your toxicity elsewhere.
@@Adrian-zd4cs This is exacrly what I meant. It's not the stores themselves or the companies represented, it's seeing the places where I made so many memories decayed and abbandoned.
@@ocoolwow I mean Black Fridays and Christmas Shopping yeah sure but we was a Community there a thing you did when you had to actually Socialized with people remember that? you know talking to Human Beings?
I worked for Sears for 15 years in the 90's & 00's. Sears was so cheap, they didn't pay for preventative maintenance, our HVAC was always down because they didn't want to pay the PM contract. I'm not surprised it is especially rough, they didn't take care of things.
These shopping centers were as cheap as the merchandise they sold. It was all expendable. That people anchor their nostalgia to late-stage capitalism is pretty sad.
Not surprised. Sears didn't make its money selling stuff, it made its money selling franchises. Greed destroys everything.
Should have shorted the company with a % of your paycheck every week. You had the inside baseball scoop.
Online retailers like Amazon played a role, but many malls were in decline long before online was a thing. For many middle class families during the 60's and 70's they aspired to shop at these upscale retail outlets and malls boomed. The 70's saw the rise of the Galleria Malls that were more upscale than the older malls and, once again, the middle class went there when they could. But, in the 80's, these malls began to be undercut by the discount places like Walmart and Cosco so long before the internet was a thing for the average person and long before online retail was a thing the middle class had to transition away from aspiring to shop at upscale retail outlets and, instead, had to make do with less. The internet came along and by about 1995 the tools needed to browse the internet became available and then, by the late 90's, companies like Amazon were the nail in the coffin.
Excellent points most people don't see
The one by me closed due to rising crime. Car thefts, fights, shoplifting, etc.
Amazing. Everyone can remember going to malls just like this in their teenage years or with their parents as a little kid. Surreal to see abandoned malls today. Sad.
Cherryvale Mall in Rockford Illinois is like this. There are some stores that are still in business, but some former anchor stores such as Sears are gone. There have been shootings and violence there. Its unbelievable how much the mall has deteriorated.
It really is sad. For those of us that frequented the malls and remember.
@@cherylpesutimassie5010 Some people take guns into the malls to have gangs fights. Anything good they try to destroy it.
“Their is no god the end is -NEAR- “
Great job as always!! Being a 70s/80s kid, the mall was the true place to gather! It’s sad to see them fall by the wayside but we are in a new age. It’s good to see downtowns gaining some strength again with smaller, privately owned businesses finding a new place in retail.
for sure !
Yeah, not to upset about the changes.
We have seen many unique stores open near us. We have yoga places and smoothie shops next to pipe stores and bicycle repair spots. It's much better then the malls and walmart.
what does "we are in a new age" mean? Americans shop for primarily Chinese goods online instead of shopping locally? i don't think people realise what they're allowing to decline in their own country. First manufacturing and now shops. A lot of that cheap online stuff has pumped huge amounts of cash into a totalitarian state. Not the best idea.
@@lynnpayne9519 why is it much better? Would the same businesses be lesser if they rented a space in a mall? It's just s group of businesses. If the main focus of your pocal community is yoga, smoothies and bikes, my guess is it's a boho neighbourhood and the lack of corporate branding is seen as more charming . But that's just a taste. Malls are functionally useful, especially for people with limited transport or mobility or people with their children (especially as malls usually have toilet facilities - which not all individual stores offer patrons). Basically, I don't think communities allowing bricks and mortar stores to die off as being a sensible thing. These stores haven't necessarily relocated or been replaced by others.
Did an assessment on an abandoned hospital. It had only been shut down for a couple weeks and was shut down abruptly so everything was still in its place just as though patients were still there. I spent several days in that large 7 story building with no electricity or lights, going from room to room. I was never so scared in my life. Really creeped me out. I had nightmares for weeks afterward. Never again...
would extremely interested in seeing some photos of it!
What did you really see
Never again. 😂
Yeah, I want to see lol
Why were you there then?
Was it work related or hobby? I say that because there are several TH-cam channels that explore such places.
its really sad and nostalgic to see abandoned malls, its seeing a time of your life full of memories and an entire era just going away
Yeah the Sears was definitely creepy to explore! Great video man!
The stores in Canada were more creepy as they “renovated” and liquidated at the same time. You could smell death as soon as you walked in!
We miss you buddy 🥲🤗
Stephen King could write a book about this place.
Like family guy which made me laugh lol!!
More creepy were K Marts, BEFORE they closed.
Being a 50's 60's 73 year old I remember how malls like this destroyed my beloved downtown Tacoma. Now malls are seeing a decline. What irony.
The Mom and Pop stores revenge!!!!
@@agentorange2554 If only that were the case. What we get for the most part these days are big chain stores in strip malls. It's more and more places to choose from fewer choices.
Same thing happened to our city, Brockton, MA. We were assurd, " oh no, the mall won't have any effect on downtown and the mom and pop stores". Within a year downtown was ghosted, the many small stores were closed and the whole downtown went into decline. Now the most of downtown is court houses and family services. Their answer to downtown restoration. Very sad indeed!!
Amazon, WalMart, and globalization has killed them all.
And people have come back to downtown Tacoma.
I remember going to sears to look at computers which were a new thing back in the Early 80s. They were one of the few outlets that sold them back then. How ironic that they played an integral part in the stores demise.
This gives me an indescribable feeling a mix of sadness and something I can't explain
I have a feeling like that. It’s overwhelming just slightly
Look up “liminal spaces”, “back rooms,” and “uncanny valley” on the Why Files” TH-cam page for your answers.
i''ll never understand why struggling malls end up carpeting their corridors over any original tiling. doesn't it just make more work to maintain it for the staff they can't afford to keep? and it just ends up looking nasty.
Carpeting is gross.
carpet is the cheapest floor covering to install to freshen the look.
@@MMA-mh9uv And it causes the most allergies (I think).
@@MMA-mh9uv Only short term...
dont have to pull up the tiles so its cheaper
When I was a kid in the 50's going shopping downtown was a huge thrill. Then everyone moved to the suburbs in the 60's the corner stores were the in place to be...then the malls came! They were thrilling. There is only one mall near me now, and stores are leaving. So sad.
Natural progression. It is sad that we plan poorly and waste our resources.
😞
seeing videos like this make me sad. especially all the vandalism. I remember going to the mall when I was a kid with my sister. Sears has been open forever, and just recently closed in the last few years. Every time I think of Sears, I think of my dad, because he was a service tech, and he repaired washers and dryers for over 40 years.
got alot of respect for service techs they could fix anything what skill!
Back when they were WORTH fixing. Lol
It’s happening to my mall as well. It’s an extremely slow bleed, with the renovation of its food court and adding a arcade, but it’s still not enough to save it. Kids just don’t really want to go to malls, and as humans of a bygone era, we’re slowly dying too.
Funnily enough, a recent development of a outdoor shopping area popped up, and is currently thriving.
I’m guessing people just want to feel alive while shopping, instead of just being in a huge building full of people. (And the annoying show cleaner vendors in the middle of the mall’s walkway)
I'm only 15, but I have so many memories at my old mall. All the old people who would populate the mall passed away, and it eventually had at most 10 customers per week. Most stores were already shut down and there were only a couple food places and an arcade. They had built a Wal-Mart right next to it, so everyone would go there. I remember Christmas shopping at the mall and when I heard it shut down it broke my heart. It was now bought by a different company, and it's going to be an apartment complex and mall. Hopefully they recapture the 80s style and restore some of the best features there.
It’s interesting your outdoor mall is thriving as well. I grew up in three large cities and the mall was always something special and fun. I didn’t get to go shopping all of the time and it was always and occasion to go. I remember riding the city bus into the next city to go to the mall. Those were good times and so dear to me. I am so sad those malls have become nearly empty retail and food court space. At least one mall renovated a lot of the space into office space. Maybe that is the answer for the future. Our outdoor mall in the area thrives. It’s always busy. It’s not the same feeling, but it’s still nice to people watch. It makes me so sad to see some of these malls just completely in ruins. I think of the people that they employed, the help they provided to the economy as a whole along with all of the great memories that people who remember and appreciate these old malls have. It reminds me that the m older and that times, along with people are different. You can’t go home again… that’s the perfect example of this.
My mall is thriving as well. A super big arcade called Round 1, a Pokemon store with a manga store, hot topic, and bustling food court every time I go there. Not every mall is going extinct, they just keep evolving to keep them in the public mind and draw in certain groups of people
im a teenager and i got a mall close to where i live and i love going to it a lot of other people do too i see a lot of other teens there but theres another mall near where i live that almost no one goes to or at least not near as many people as the other one kinda sad but i hope malls never fully die out because i love going to them so much
Yup the pandemic affected alot of things
0:49 There's something poignant about the forgotten toy, never owned. Kind of encapsulates the entire situation.
Yeah...felt bad when saw it.😞
😢😢😢
What's worse is that a good cleaning and that thing could still be perfectly usable. Run it through the washing machine and some kid could enjoy that for years.
I would have taken it and given it a good cleaning. I have donated many almost new toys to "Toys for Tots". I refurbish them to a "new" state.
“Bunny doll, never held”
I love these abandoned mall videos. They remind me of my childhood and how my Grandparents would always do the bulk of their holiday shopping at the mall. We'd eat in the food court, I'd always get to pick our Christmas PJ's in the Sears and then we'd head out to all the other shops. They had a Sears card and everything. That always leads me to think about how many memories were made with other people in these old malls. Holidays, special occasions, back to school shopping, or just a weekend shopping, there were so many reasons to shop at the mall back then. Online retail is convenient in many ways, but I don't get to form these sort of memories with my kids while I use my Amazon Prime account. Thanks for doing these videos BSF!
Your comment got me to thinking. I was in a goodwill yesterday and struck up a 10-15 minute conversation with the woman next to me as we skimmed through the entire dress section. We miss out on these things with online shopping.
@@lmitchell3604 Yep. One less thing to do to get out of the house in a world of less things to do and less ability to do them.
Meryanp So true. It's convenient to do everything from the house, but the stuff we tend to remember is the exception, which means leaving the house. This is a great post, thank you!
I feel the same way. There’s a local mall that was built in the late 80s that I spent a lot of time in in the early 90s in college. It’s still here but it’s a shadow of itself. All the anchors are gone except a Dillards outlet that takes up only half its original space. I was walking through the mall right before Christmas last year and it was a sad shadow of what it looked like during Christmas 30 years ago.
@@hralf6041 exactly, well put
The garden growing inside of the mall entrance was genuinely breathtaking.
You're breathtaking
Wouldn't call that a garden 😂🤣. More like random patch of invasive nuisance weeds
It shows you how nature reclaims its space.
@@chutcentral lol 😅
@@lifecloud2 reminds me of the end scene of planet of the apes 😢
My hometown (Piqua, OH) had its first mall in 1969. Another was opened but is dying as well. I may be a relic of the past, but I hate to see these old stores closing.
Piqua is a great place! I had family who lived up there. Thats sad to hear that.
I'm in Los Angeles,and I totally agree with U.
It always amazes me to see the closed restaurants often still have all the restaurant equipment still in place. That stuff is incredibly easy to move and can be worth a pretty penny on the used market.
Is it legal to take? that's a genuine question as I assume that given its all been abandoned, there's no inventory, no owners etc.
@@themacraecase4323 it still belongs to somebody.
so i guess no one is allowed to take anything in that mall?
Once you have mold/mildew/rust on it, it's only salvage. At best. You'll never get that cr*p to stay off.
@@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Yeah, better to scrap it and melt it down again than risk trying to clean it and use it again. You miss one tiny little spot and someone's getting a trip to the ER.
Man what a trip damn shame malls are closing all over the country it's all internet and shop online now sometimes I wish I could go back to the 80's even mid 70's when I grew up and stay there.
It's a lonelier world out there ...
In other words, stay as a kid. Everything is better when you were a kid.
Click your stack shoes together 16 times and say something magical and BAM!! Back to Bell Bottoms, Disco, and Loads of Pubes!
Good thing the malls where I live are still open. Cause unlike some people the owners actually know how to operate a business
@@Sailorbyday You're missing the point. The INTENT was to bankrupt the business ON PURPOSE
These malls are time machines. I have been working in malls since 1998. Man this looks like the mall in my town design wise. The mall I work in currently was built in 2006. So pre 2008 crash. So far it’s worked pretty well location wise. It’s an open air plan with parking near the individual stores. Our indoor mall had the original stores in it. One being Spensors. Sad passage of time. Delightful tour Jake.
Time capsule
As a former 70s/80s teenage mall rat, seeing malls as literal ruins makes me feel ancient. I can't lament too much though considering I'm part of the problem. For years I've only shopped at my local mall about six times a year.
That's a lot more than many others, including myself.
Yeah I don't even remember the last time I visited my local mall. lt was probably a decade ago, or more. But I remember as a kid that's where all the action was. Ride the bus to the mall, spend like all day milling about, wandering back and forth between the arcade and Orange Julius or whatever. Checking out KB Toys to see if they got any new NES games in.
There is no local mall where I live now.
I was more frightened watching this than half the horror movies out today. There was a sense of dread, tension; I expected someone to come out and attack (thank goodness that did not happen). You made your own found footage movie and are already better than most. I appreciate this video so much as a former mall addict and mall lamenter, I really pine for those old days. The mall at 163rd did the same as Parkwood around the same time to become indoor from outdoor (I can't remember if it was when I moved to N Miami Beach in 79 or the next year in 1980. I never felt so excited at the prospect! Of course that is silly since I already knew of the WoodBridge huge indoor multi-level mall in NJ where I lived before that. I used to go visit malls in other states because I just loved them! This was so eerie and scary with the vandalism - some of what people wrote - so frightening!
Its just super depressing and nostalgic rather than creepy to me, im sure it has that haunted being watched feeling at least, but being 6 watching spongebob on cable then going to the mall at getting an xbox 360 in person is a nostalgic feeling i will never get back.
I worked at this mall in the 90's for about 3 years and in two different stories. The Diner that you went into was an Andy's Cheeseburgers and Cheese Steaks at that point, which was where I mainly worked. I also worked at a record store called Camelot Music. I spent hundreds and hundreds of hours in that mall at work and had friends who worked at many of the stores you toured. Growing up in Wilson we went there all the time when I was kid: Played at the arcade, shopped in the stores, got my haircut, and even got my first cell phone plan at the Radio Shack there. So wild to see it now.
Sounds like a grand ol time Chris
Back then the burgers were so much better too!
OMG...I used to work at the Radio Shack in the late 90s until about 2001. I ate at that Andy's all the time and Catos was right beside us. This is wild. I had no idea this mall closed.
It's creepy how some stores are still attached and operating at these otherwise abandoned malls. I would certainty not like to shop or work at those places knowing there is an extremely dangerous, disused, dank post apocalyptic playground for drug addicts and the homeless to live and hang out in, just on the other side of some plywood boards.
I work at a mostly dead mall and honestly you just get used to it after a while. When somebody overdoses in the bathroom you just move on with your day
@@prylosecorsomething3194 that's cold lol
Wait that sounds fun...
Get out of your cell phone life and look around, this is far from true creepy. You want creepy? go to a college campus and look around at all the social media addicts mainlining Sugar and Xtasy, all zombified by cell phone addiction and lack of human contact, strung out on a once impossible addiction, Marijuana. That's creepy!
If you are in the NYC area, specifically Long Island, check out the Source Mall, that a good example.
Update: The Source Mall is actually now re-developed into Samanea with a 99 Ranch Supermarket in the back
I remember shopping in Denver's now abandoned and razed "Cinderella City" mall after all the anchors had vacated and there were just two or three small shops open in each hallway, to the point where sometimes you would be completely out of sight of an open store. Super creepy.
I must say that what was going through my mind seeing this empty mall was not all the merchandise or the memories of shopping, but rather about the people who used to work there, draw a paycheque and feed a family. I worked for a while in retail in my younger days. The pay was dismal, the hours long, but I did work with some pretty cool people. It was a stepping stone for me and I moved on, however there were some who paid their rent by working there. Where are they now?
Rehab?
Me as well. It was my teenage employment
Why did you spell pay check as "paycheque"?
@@dannygreen5477 because I’m Canadian, and that’s how we spell it. Kind of like colour for the hues of the rainbow instead of color as it’s spelled in the US. Sorry.
My best job I ever worked was at the mall, i work an office job now but my god it’s boring compared to how much fun I used to have working at the mall in retail.
Depressing beyond words- I feel like its more than the mall that's in decline
So true. These buildings are like The Picture of Dorian Grey. We're deteriorating as a civilization but the malls are showing the age, sickness and neglect.
Your feelings are correct.
With our current administration ALL of America will look like this by the next 2 years. A third world sh*thole is what they're aiming for.
Agenda 21
OUR NATION IS ON HOSPICE DEAR. Death is near.
Question for the filmmakers: did you all actually hear the song “Relax” while exploring the mall? It sounds like it’s playing from a far-off speaker. If so, that adds a whole new level of creepiness.
Heard it also!
Yes, thought they'd added it.
Yes, I heard that too. I wonder if was coming from the one remaining open store, that only had access from the outside. It’s possible that it could be heard through the walled-over former mall entrance, if they were standing near there.
Interesting choice for Franky goes to Hollywood for a venue, from arenas to abandoned malls. Frankie
Says
It was haunting. An 80’s song playing in an abandoned mall whose heyday way in the 80’s! It was like the mall’s “death rattle”. Clinging to life as it was breathing it’s last breath of air.
So many memories for many of us. It was another world back then. This is heartbreaking to see it like this, but at least we were there. I feel bad for these kids who have no idea why we feel such nostalgia for these places and times gone by. They were much happier times than now.
As a kid of the 80’s who went to the mall every weekend it’s sad. My local mall which had the same fate was demolished and on outdoor shopping complex was built which does well. At least before Covid
Thank you for these videos
I was a teen back then, and it was awful. I'm much happier and better off now than I had ever been back then.
Where is his mall located
@@davidlafleche1142 location of mall
@@hawk2156 I don't know where this one is; but the malls I knew in Rhode Island and Massachusetts were pretty much the same.
@@davidlafleche1142 Ty
When I see these malls abandoned, I see so many memories abandoned with it: Christmas shopping, first jobs for teenagers, video arcade wins, buying LPs and cassettes. It's all those memories...left to die.
Out with the old, in with the new. We all have our time coming.
I always feel so sad when I watch the abandoned malls. I used to love browsing, shopping, eating within them. We still have them in the UK, but as so many shops have ceased trading over the past few years, they are not what they were. Neither are town centres for that matter. But the way these Malls were left always amazes me.
this reminds me of the mall in my city. the two biggest stores, macys and sears, closed many years ago but yet it’s still open. i don’t expect it to flourish again, but it’s sad. i have so many memories there from singing in my elementary choir to watching movies in the theater and having birthday parties. rip oviedo mall, even though you are not dead yet.
Thank you for adding the history to your explorations! This is why your channel is my favorite exploration channel on TH-cam!
I’m glad you enjoyed it, thanks!
Have you watched his film Closed For Storm aboot Six Flags in New Orleans? Been crossing my fingers that he does another film in the future.
@@John_Locke_108 It's on my list when I do a DVD buy again. I want so bad to see it!
@@closetgamer8315 It's on Amazon Prime.
The death of malls make me sad. I always loved the in person shopping experience. I try and keep it that way. I feel like humans are just making life too accessible and too easy. There’s art to a mall.
Thank the liberal left. They ruin everything.
I think I'm thankful to be living in an place (that being the Tampa Bay region) that still has thriving malls that are still being perused and shopped at every day of week. From watching all of the various abandoned mall videos across channels like yours and Dan Bell's, it always seems like when a population center dramatically shifts away from one area to another is when Malls begin struggling.
At least here where I'm living, while housing and living costs are going up, that's because so many people and families and businesses are moving into town, I'm seeing places that were just grass fields for all of my childhood suddenly becoming new suburbs and apartments, heck my local mall now has a brand-new apartment complex right across the street from it so people living there could easily go and walk to the mall if they needed food or anything else.
So the local malls in my area will remain relevant for years to come, it seems that malls in places where people are leaving or moving away seems to be the ones that eventually fall to a fate like this or just become erased for something new.
tampa is still a master class in poor urban design
People use an area for 30 or 40 years. And then they want brand new sub divisions and malls. So they leave the older ones to just rot away. It’s pathetic and disgusting. Same trend keeps happening over and over. Where your mall is doing fine now, that will change.
Pretty much all the malls in the area are doing great, the worst one is probably University Mall, which is under a major refurbishment currently.
same here, fortunately Gurnee Mills in IL is still thriving.
Same here in Dallas, especially our high-end malls, like NorthPark, the Galleria and Stonebriar. NP was jam-packed at Christmas. I guess it's because they're destinations in themselves, and they offer so many great choices. It doesn't hurt that shopping is a major sport in Dallas. People-watching at NP is amazing. I looked like a hobo compared to most of the people in there.
Those store fronts are huge. I would totally live in one if they cleaned up the mall
I work security in a still pretty healthy mall. What you said about the quiet is true, they sound proof spaces really well. You can't even hear the music that plays in the common areas in the security office or service halls. It's honestly incredible.
I love these videos and they depress me so much missing my teenage years hanging out at a mall that no longer exists. I'm not even 40 and so much of my childhood/formative years is just gone already.
I'm a bit more than 50, same thing really, but I wonder whether these days it's become a process that seems to happen faster than it once did.
A while ago I talked to a guy in his mid 20s, he said at school social fads came and went so fast, and now compared to current teens and whatever they're into, he already feels old. Such a strange thing. Referring to the home micro boom of the late 70s and 80s, he said he was kinda sad that he never got to see that, instead growing up during a time when computer tech, consoles, etc. were already established. It was an interesting point of view to hear.
I think it's been made worse by a modern govt/media encouraged cultural shift toward regarding anything old as bad that should be replaced (often exploited for ideological reasons), while the nature of what people buy has changed to being products that many replace on an annual basis, everything from phones to furniture. It's an Ikea and iPhone world.
Nothing is built to last, nothing persists, and so much is the same everywhere, hence not surprising perhaps that the activities in which people engage themselves become very transitory, there's not time to build up anything that can even become a "tradition" before the next fad has already arrived and shoved the old out of the way, regardless of whether it has any genuine merit (just whatever gets the most clicks & views). That at the homogenous nature of modern products means there's a sterility to what people do, less and less local variation. People just want page 43 from the Ikea catalogue, whereas I really like old furniture from the 1920s & 30s. Recently, dealing with a late relative's estate, I found it bizarre that an Ikea chest of drawers sold for considerably more than an almost century old chest of drawers which to my eye looked much nicer, and it was easier to find a buyer for the Ikea unit. Segwaying somewhat here but it's a related theme.
I've read so many comments from those who say these malls were places where they hung out as children or teens. So what do such demographics do now? Where do they go? Or are they just stuck at home or on street corners, staring at phones or computer games? I'm glad I grew up in the 70s and was able in a more rural area to climb trees, fish in the river, roam the old quarry, etc.
The years between age 30 and 60 seem to just suddenly vanish; make the best of every day.
Extremely nostalgic. My mother bought me my first bra from a Sears store, at Fashion Square Mall in Orlando, FL. I even worked at the same mall, years later, during Christmas season, when I was 15 yrs old. Lol. "Robinson's", which was bought out by Dillard's.
Oh....the memories.
Thank you for the stroll down memory lane.
Creepy how the music is still playing in the background In places
That's how I'd add atmosphere to the experience: a muffled, distant '80s soundtrack playing like a fading memory.
WOW, you did a great job with the music because it creeped me out so bad when I saw this video a few days ago and didn't hear you mention it. I had to come back here and read through the comments just to have some closure lol
Really well done and haunting as hell 🤯😂
My favorite way to spend the day was to go to the local Mall where all my favorite stores were under one roof. It's so terribly sad to see those glory days coming to a swift end. I see more and more deserted shopping mall buildings with the store logos stripped from the facings. It always makes me so sad... Online shopping is fast and convenient, but it doesn't compare with the excitement of SEEING AND TOUCHING the merchandise in person and the thrill of Holiday shopping. Thank you for posting this.
I love the research you've made and sprinkle tid bits of historical facts in the commentary. Most abandoned places TH-cam channel are just "hey look at this place" without any back story. Good job you've earned yourself a new subscriber
Thanks!
Man, I love places like this. Even if they're obviously closed to the public, I still find my way in. I train dogs for Urban Search and Rescue, and abandoned and decrepit facilities like this are perfect for training dogs for disaster response.
I thank you for your awesome service. I love that you do this - dogs love to work and have a purpose and they are so fantastic as service dogs and search and rescue and K9 cop dogs and explosives! They rock and so do you!
Watch their littld paws. Please.
1:59 Someone spray paints a smiley face in the mirror
HINT
@@jbjacobs9514 Somehow explosives and dogs don't mix well for me.
This sure feels like a virtue signal and far from the truth.
Thank you for this video. .I stumbled onto it by accident but it has special meaning to me because right after I graduated in 1984 from college (ECU) with an accounting degree, I took a job as a manager trainee at Roses. Had grown up about an hour from Wilson where this mall was located and when I accepted the job with Roses, ended up being placed at the Parkwood mall that is in your video. Retail was not really for me and only remained about 5 months before I moved on to a different job in banking but I did spend those five months at that mall and remember the various stores that were there at that time. But of course as your video indicated the mall went through a renovation several years after I left and a lot of the stores that I remember from my time there had changed or moved out. Even the Roses Store that I worked had gotten a full renovation and didn't look like it did when I worked there. Remember there being a restaurant called Something Different that was one of my favorite places to eat and there was also a K&W Cafeteria in that mall as well as a donut shop called Shelley's (sp), prounounced She-Lees, donuts. There was a JCPenney, the Roses and Belks Stores but I do not remember the Sears store being there at that time. It was my first experience working retail and it was amazing how well you get to know not only the people in the store that you work but the other Mall workers as well sort of like a family.
I feel sorry for the kids of today that will never have the memories of going to the mall with your family.
You should check out the American Dream Mall. Yeah it's had a rough and slow start to get filled up with stores but now WOW! Waterpark ,indoor skiing, Legoland, Aquarium, Ferris Wheel 2 miniature golf courses and so much more!
As a 15 yr old, I actually have active malls nearby me and me and my fam might go there sometime. Oaks Mall in Gainesville has a very high occupancy and knows what to do with areas, as well as keep it themselves up and running with the times. Vans and Hot Topic are right next to each other, and many different stores inside take up the entire place. Even when the Macy's shut down, Dillard's was able to make an exclusively Women's store on that same area later on.
All these kids know is fortnite amd watching youtubers play other games…
@@thatgirl4429 "they"? You mean "I" since it's clearly about you and not other people. People like me and some others really like the mall or at least want to experience it. It may as well just be a teenager thing now lol.
@@διαβόητο23φάντασμα i feel like this is an outdated generalization considering fortnite lowkey died
I find it really sad that the malls are closing. Times are changing because people no longer go out & uave good times with their families and friends. Everyone is online. My best memories as a teenager is at the mall with friends. We shopped, had kunch, went to the arcade & movies. Teenagers today sit & spread & become almost catatonic on their phones.
I agree. kids rely too much on electronics. however, I'm wondering if a lot of the decline of the mall (besides online shopping) is people are kinda scared to venture out around a lot of people bc of all the mass shootings. could be. Its very sad.
not true , indoor malls use to be convenient because you could come and get all your essentials in one place , now it is more convenient to jus order from each of those stores online. Outdoor plazas & Boutique type stores are actually thriving , people shop in person now for the experience. People want to try on shoes , jeans, dresses etc especially expensive ones and they always will
Yes, true in so many ways. In the industry and how the corporate has everything set up (which someone here neglected to think about) it has caused allot of job losses. Everything online from buying to common communication with one another. We went from the physical world with all our 5 sense's to loose most of them by living on the web, evolving mentally backwards. You can't even Touch or Feel the product or ones emotions you may be communication with on the web many adore. Loosing touch with each other. Jobs are getting dropped yet are our prices of modern day living and it's basic needs balancing out with it?* The population is expanding as many got multiple baby mommas or daddy's (it IS the truth, do the research on human population and it's genetics of each and every individual, to much time and effort? I bet*) yet not enough job opportunities available to equal out as the concept of Greed took over with every advanced method discovered time and time again. They tell you eat McDonald's (in which you do) yet wonder why your sick later and can't afford the health problem that arrived years down the way. You did as you were told by the manipulation trick of ones mind.
I don’t think it’s sad. It’s just progress. People are online because for most people it really is better spent time. We are also much more connected to the rest of the world. We have greater ability to get correct. I think back in the day when malls were a bigger thing older people also complained that the kids are wasting time and money at the mall instead of spending time at school, playing sports, or working. All they do is spend spend spend. It’s a matter of perspective.
"INFLATION."
Even when open, Sears stores were rather scary in the last 20 years. The displays were old style, the floor plan never changed and the store furnishings were crappy and deteriorating.
Yes, they never ditched the 80's style or the 1925 one 🥴
Here in Las Vegas at the Meadows Mall Sears about 8 years back I bought a Craftsman stainless steel 20 oz. hammer with a beautiful blonde wood handle for only around $9. Total bargain for great American craftmanship! My four children were concerned why Dad purchased said hammer on our little shopping mall outing, but damn such a bargain and a tool that will last forever!
Yes! Totally agree. It felt dark and gloomy. Plus the clothes were not cute.
@@thespankdmonkey Sears had Craftsman Brand power tools. Still use a compact all steel table saw and a power jig saw that I bought in 1989- made in USA, still works, good value for the money. The brand was sold to black and decker I think.
@@noxirs7059 The Sears might be a good set piece for a Blade Runner sequel, very little production design would be needed to start filming.
Truly sad to see all these malls going away. Growing up in the age of the first malls was an awesome experience. Seeing that Pennys and Sears brings back so many memories of each August when momma would take us school clothes shopping. Back then we only got school clothes once a year and it was a very big deal. Thanks for the walk down memory lane. If you see a functioning mall still out there somewhere please go shop so they can stay open 😊
Some of my greatest memories as a kid was going to the mall on the weekend with my parents, it seemed like such a different world.
and it was
“With your parents”? 🤦🏻♂️
@@Frankie5Angels150 Yeah, was I going to drive myself when I was 5?
@@bababooey7126 yeah, obviously. And buy everything you wanted with your paycheck from your full time job. 🙄🙄😆😆
I'm not a bit surprised that the Roses is still open. I have one here in my town, and they have a very loyal fan base with the senior citizens, the folks who live deep in the country and the skirt wearing church goers/Pentecostal believers. The inside of that mall was apocalyptic. I would have had the heebie jeebies being in there. Great video!
My first job was working stockroom at Sears. My section stockroom was a strangely comforting place to be. I felt so at home there, big service elevator and all. When I no longer worked there, I'd sometimes go to the store and peer into the windows of the swinging stockroom doors. I no longer had access but it was like looking into a window back in time. About 15 years later that Sears was completely demolished, but that entire wing of the mall was rebuilt for another department store. That mall is still pretty busy.
This mall reminds me of my local mall. Our three anchor stores were JCPenney, Sears and Castner Knott (today it is a Dillard's). When my friends and I were between the ages of 13-15 (92-95), our mothers would drop us off here in the evening where we'd walk around until a late showing at the theater next door where we'd be picked up after watching a movie. Everything was so drastically different back then compared to today. I wouldn't change my youth and the time I was raised for anything in the world! To anyone in that age bracket who may be reading this; cherish every moment, make lots of friends and have fun! Once your youth is gone, it's gone for good. There will be no going back to change anything so enjoy it while you can.
I miss Castner Knott! I grew up in Antioch TN. Hickory Hollow was my home away from home!😢
I went to the mall once every week as a kid. I can honestly say it was the one thing I looked forward to the most. So fun