I figured A&F would’ve remodeled the space more extensively; doesn’t look too different than when Banana Republic was open. The store looks great, though, and I hope they do well.
We went to Penn Square mall today just to eat at the food court because we were in the area. We got there a little after 4:00 so less than 2 hours before they close on Sunday. We haven't been there since before Covid. The place was packed with people. Parking lot on the south side practically full. We've been to Quail Springs Mall several times just this year and it is nowhere near as busy. I'd even say practically dead compared to PSM. I did notice that most people there were pretty young compared to me and my wife.
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That food court in particular is not only full of desirable places to eat, but seemingly always busy.
I like the Japanese place Sarku and I am always behind 10 orders or so, although they are very fast in their prep.
I thought I had heard that Malls were dying. Apparently not this one. The whole mall was busy, not just the food court. And such a young crowd not just hanging out but shopping in the stores from what we saw. I had Charley's. The food is always hot and fresh there. My wife had Panda Express. She did say the Chinese food at Quail is better than PE at PSM.
Pottery Barn is a big store to replace. I wonder if they have a tenant on the waiting list for that spac already lined up.
I mean, typical shopping malls are dying. Penn Square Mall is the last primarily retail one standing in OKC. Crossroads had a slow painful death, and Quail Springs Mall essentially had to reinvent itself as more of an entertainment and lifestyle center in addition to the remaining retail it retains. Quail Springs had an opportunity to be the "it" mall around the turn of the century, but there has been little investment by its various owners since the last major renovation when AMC was added in late 1998. Other than the retail mix it has added (H&M, Round One, Blue Zoo, Von Maur, the common areas of the mall look like they did 20 or so years ago.
In a market like OKC and smaller, it seems that each metro can support one traditional mall, Tulsa has Woodland Hills, Wichita has Towne East, etc. All of these have one thing in common, Simon Property Group, which tends to be the "higher end" shopping mall in the market and has destination stores in addition to the traditional anchors.
Burger King has filed to take space in the food court currently occupied by Neighborhood News and Freshen's Yogurt.
What a waste of space. You can eat Burger King anywhere. The mall should have unique food. I'll say the same for Popeyes too. I won't include Chick Fil A because there was a time when they were only in malls with no stand alone locations.
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