I really dont think that most people care whether they have exclusive anything...in fact, if they take the approach you mention (that people WILL have to go there) then it could very well bring their existence to a close even sooner. Obviously, you don't win customers by forcing them in to your store--there's always a competitor that will sell the customer what they need and make the experience better. It's also like fighting gravity--why why why fight things the hard way? You can invest a little capital in making your place of business a place people WANT to go shop and earn a loyal customer base and profit more in the long run. That mall I mentioned down south on the coast--I was just there last week--it works great! Easy to get in and out of. And they're always packed, but they planned for that, so you don't notice as much. And it is as big, if not bigger than penn square.
I was just over at Penn the other day and can confirm that no construction is happening at the moment. You mentioned the two additional stories to the existing parking garage. That even furthers my point. Any sane person could understand that at some point, the traffic within the garage is going to get congested as well, because the exits and entrances for the garage are still gonna be limited to the same capacity. Again, why keep fighting gravity??? Gravity is our friend and we must learn to live with it because we cannot overcome it. One person suggested a re-design of the existing parking lot (which is surface only) and make it as efficient as possible. Whether it's building more easily accessible and balanced garages or whatever the result may be, I LIKE THAT IDEA...it contains logic and would involve analysis of the traffic and shape the final product to the load, making the place more customer-friendly. Spread the load--load balance--whatever you want to call it. Quit piling up a bunch of afterthoughts and build something right, that works.
It's sort of off-topic, but a relevant point. Look at what the city just did at that intersection in front of Bell Isle, next to Penn Square. The off-ramp from I-44 to NW EXPWY was poorly designed and so instead of fixing it or learning from the mistake, they block off the right lane, so traffic (like me) coming from the east can't turn right. What the heck is up with that? I have a right to access that lane, but because the city is so hardheaded...geez. That's the mentality that I'm talking about...and it exists just the same in that Penn Square Mall.
I'll say it again, you're not gonna strongarm customers into that place. That's fightin gravity bro, and it aint gonna fly. People can get their stuff from other retailers or on the internet. If you want the business, invest in your customers.
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