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Lakewood Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lakewood Center
Map
LocationLakewood, California, United States
Coordinates33°51′02″N 118°08′24″W / 33.85047°N 118.14011°W / 33.85047; -118.14011
Opening date1952
DeveloperMay Centers
ManagementMacerich
OwnerMacerich (60%) and GIC (40%)
No. of stores and services225
No. of anchor tenants11
Total retail floor area2,069,000 sq ft (192,200 m2) (GLA)
No. of floors1 (2 in Round One and Target, 3 in JCPenney, 4 in Macy's)
Websiteshoplakewoodcenter.com

Lakewood Center is a super-regional shopping mall in Lakewood, California. Lakewood Center opened in 1952 and was enclosed in 1978.[1]

The interior mall is anchored by Costco, Forever 21, JCPenney, Macy's, a Round One Entertainment center, and Target. Several businesses surround the mall property, including 24 Hour Fitness, Albertsons, Best Buy, Burlington, and The Home Depot.

At 2,069,000 square feet (192,200 m2), the Lakewood Center is ranked among the largest retail shopping malls by gross leasable area in the United States.[2]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Lakewood Center: The Core of a Community (Modern Architecture in Los Angeles)
  • Lakewood Center I + II
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  • Lakewood: "The Future City as New as Tomorrow" (Modern Architecture in Los Angeles)

Transcription

They fell in love with Lakewood. They loved the way the homes and streets were laid out so neatly around the super-modern shopping centers with acres of free parking. Their whole pattern of living, working, and shopping became that of modern suburbia. To many, Lakewood was paradise. Lakewood being a place that was built almost overnight because of the GIs. It was like the creation of a whole city to take care of the new generation of people after the war, this kind of new optimism. And in that kind of classic suburban layout they needed a shopping center. This is the May Company center at Lakewood. 1949Ñ51, right in that era. It was, if not the first shopping center in the United States, it was one of the first. And ordinarily shopping, you know, the department stores were in downtowns, and all lined up on a street. Here they pulled it aside, had the parking go around it, had big service tunnels underneath it, and it really became a new model for how the suburban world would unfold. That the shopping wouldn't be all in a bunch of little shops anymore, it would be in one big large center.

History

Lakewood Center opened in February 1952, serving the post-war planned community of Lakewood.[3] The mall was originally anchored by two department stores, a large May Company and a much smaller three-level, 88,000 square-foot Butler Brothers.

Upon opening on February 18, 1952, the four-level, 346,700-square-foot (32,210 m2)[4] May Company-Lakewood was the largest suburban department store in the world.[5] (On Broadway in Downtown Los Angeles, May Company-Downtown was also the largest of the Broadway and 7th Street department stores, taking up an entire city block and with over a million square feet of floor space.[6])

New stores were built around 1954-1955 in a section of the mall called the Faculty Shops, though they were not connected to the mall proper.[7] 1965 brought two new department stores to the property: a four-level Bullock's and a two-level Buffums, both in standalone locations outside of the mall. Two years later, the existing mall was expanded to accommodate a two-level, 173,000 square-foot JCPenney store on the mall's south end. A standalone Pacific Theatres two-screen cinema opened in the mall's parking lot in 1968, which was later expanded to four screens in 1975. The 1970s brought another department store to the property, with a two-level, 155,000 square-foot Montgomery Ward opening in 1975 in place of the former Butler Bros., which shuttered the previous year. The Lakewood Center continued to grow in size and scale into the 1980s, with the addition of another Pacific-owned three-screen cinema (branded Pacific Theatres Lakewood Center South 1-2-3) adjacent to Buffums in 1981. A new wing anchored by a two-level, 80,000 square-foot Mervyn's was constructed on the eastern side of the center in 1982, adding a second corridor to the mall's barbell shape.

Consolidation in the department store industry led to several major changes at the Lakewood Center, as their large spaces began to turn over. Buffums shuttered in 1991 as a result of a company liquidation, while Bullock's closed in 1993 due to the bankruptcy of parent company R.H. Macy & Co.[8] That same year, May Company consolidated its two department stores nameplates in the western United States - May Co. and Robinson's - into Robinsons-May. The southern Pacific Theatres complex expanded into the former Buffums in 1992, adding six more screens in the process, while the former Bullock's was demolished to accommodate The Home Depot, which opened in 1995.[9]

In July 1996, a member of Death Row Records was attacked at Lakewood Center by Orlando Anderson among other Compton Crips. The member of Death Row had their "Death Row Chain" forcibly removed during a physical alterecation. Months later, a member of legendary Hip-Hop artist Tupac Shakur "Death Row" entourage noticed Orlando Anderson on September 7, 1996 in an MGM in Las Vegas after a Tyson-Sheldon. An altercation ensued between the Death Row entourage (led by Tupac Shakur) and Orlando Anderson regarding the stolen Death Row Chain, which ultimately led to Tupac's shooting allegedly by Orlando Anderson and his subsequent death on September 13, 1996.

The original Pacific Theatres four-screen complex was shuttered in 1998 for a dramatic expansion and renovation, and reopened in 1999 as a modern sixteen-screen multiplex.

Changes continued into the new millennium, as a new Mervyn's store was constructed adjacent to its original 1982 location. The new, single-level Mervyn's opened in August 2000, with the original Mervyn's building then repurposed as a new wing of shops leading to a newly-constructed two-level, 210,000 square-foot Macy's - the first newly-built Macy's store in Southern California. At the same time, Montgomery Ward shuttered as part of a chainwide liquidation, ending operations in March 2001. The former Montgomery Ward was then demolished to accommodate a new two-level, 160,000 square-foot Target store, which opened in October 2003.

Robinsons-May was rebranded as a Macy's after the merger of May Company with Macy's parent Federated Department Stores in 2006. The Macy's store built only five years earlier was shuttered in favor of the larger Robinsons-May building, and the one-time Macy's was demolished the following year and replaced by an unattached Costco warehouse, which opened in February 2009. The southern Pacific Theatres complex closed in 2008 and was replaced by a 24 Hour Fitness. Finally, Mervyn's filed for bankruptcy protection in 2008 and closed its stores in 2009, leading to Forever 21 purchasing the company's Lakewood lease and opening a large-scale store in the former Mervyn's building.

The property's remaining Pacific Theatres complex closed temporarily in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, only to close permanently a year later.[10] On July 21, 2023 the Lakewood Center Theaters were reopened by independent movie theater chain Starlight Cinemas.[11]

Public Transit Access

The mall is serviced by LACMTA Routes 265 and 266 along with Long Beach Transit Routes 91, 93, 103, 111, 112 and 191.[12]

Most of these routes stop along Lakewood Blvd and Hardwick St in front of Macy's while the 191 stops at Del Amo Blvd. The 91 only runs to the mall on Weekends and Holidays.

References

  1. ^ Arnold, Roxane (May 28, 1978). "Rejuvenated Lakewood Center to Enter New Era". Los Angeles Times. p. 9.
  2. ^ "Largest Shopping Malls in the United States". Archived from the original on February 21, 2009. Retrieved October 22, 2006.
  3. ^ "Lakewood Center".
  4. ^ "May Co. Opens Its vast New Lakewood Store (cont'd.)". The Los Angeles Times. February 19, 1952. p. 26. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  5. ^ "May Co. Opens Its vast New Lakewood Store". The Los Angeles Times. February 19, 1952. p. 25. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  6. ^ "Advertisement for May Company". Los Angeles Times. March 25, 1930. p. 10.
  7. ^ "MALL HALL OF FAME". Retrieved September 12, 2023.
  8. ^ White, George; Lee, Patrick (March 2, 1993). "Closures by Macy Include Former Bullocks Wilshire : Retailing: The Art Deco landmark, which is now an I. Magnin, is among eight stores to close in California". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  9. ^ Pope, John (July 7, 1994). "LAKEWOOD : Home Depot Scheduled to Open Store at Mall". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  10. ^ "Movie theater near Lakewood Center to close permanently, company announces - News". lbpost.com. April 13, 2021. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  11. ^ "Lakewood Center Theatres Now Open! - Starlight Cinemas".
  12. ^ "Routes and Services". Long Beach Transit.

External links

This page was last edited on 23 March 2024, at 22:17
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