Crossroads Mall official is optimistic about its future
BY JENNIFER PALMER
Published: October 1, 2009
Amid the empty storefronts, there is optimism at Crossroads Mall.
Optimism, because two new stores recently opened at the mall, a third will open soon and mall management has secured lease renewals with seven retailers, including Bath and Body Works.
MultimediaPhotoview all photos Crossroads, at the intersection of Interstates 240 and 35, has been plagued by vacancies, including all of its anchor stores, and faces an uncertain future with the property up for sale — either as a whole or in pieces.
Mall manager Jim Swenson prefers not to address those issues, instead deferring questions to Price Edwards & Co., which managed the property through foreclosure.
What Swenson does want to talk about are the positive happenings there, including those new stores: L’Patricia, a junior’s apparel store in the old PacSun space on the upper level, and J&D Asian gifts, on the lower level near the carousel.
Another newcomer, Dubz Dezignz, a screen printing and embroidery business, is scheduled to open Oct. 9.
Swenson, who has held his position since 1994, acknowledges these aren’t traditional mall retailers.
"We don’t have the typical lineup you’d see in an enclosed mall. We’re unique,” he said.
Attracting national chains has been tough for any mall in recent months, but especially Crossroads, where fleeing tenants seemed to create a snowball effect. Major retailers Dillard’s and Steve & Barry’s University Sportswear left in January.
Swenson said management has been focusing on snagging entrepreneurs with fresh concepts by offering attractive rates and short-term leases.
"We’re open to as short as a day or two on our short-term leases,” he said.
Battling the perception that the mall is dead or dying, or even closed, is another challenge, Swenson said. A year ago, he was touting the mall’s 120 tenants; now, it’s down to about 75.
Jeany Brown, owner of J&D Asian gifts, has been telling her customers at Old Paris Flea Market to visit her new store since it opened two weeks ago.
"I say I’m at Crossroads Mall. They say, ‘Oh, that mall is closed.’ I say ‘No, it’s not,’” she said.
Brown’s store is filled with colorful trinkets, from bonsai trees to Asian-style dresses and President Barack Obama T-shirts. She had a store in Midwest City’s Heritage Park Mall until 2003. Business was slow there, but it’s even slower at Crossroads, she said.
"I haven’t really seen much progress here,” said Brown.
But then the optimism creeps in.
"Maybe we opened at the wrong time, with the state fair (going on.) I guess we will have to be patient,” she said.
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