Category Archives: Housing

Repurposing dead malls?

A reader who uses the name “Compare Decide” shared this rather interesting compilation on the issue of failing malls in America. I’m sharing the email in full.

There was an interesting debate on your blog between a commenter who asserted that retail space can be repurposed into residential spaces, and a commenter who said that transforming retail space into residential is not really an option.

So I googled “repurposed malls”. ….

The future of malls

It seems that malls can be repurposed to new uses, in particular, office space, medical facilities and educational institutions (e.g., charter schools). But there is little mention of abandoned malls being turned into residences.

http://www.npr.org/2014/09/10/347132924/heres-whats-becoming-of-americas-dead-shopping-malls
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Online shopping, the recession and demographic shifts are some of the factors killing shopping malls. And as these changes leave behind huge concrete carcasses, they're being "reimagined" into everything from medical centers to hockey rinks. First of all, a 'dead mall' is not an abandoned mall. There is a specialized terminology that the mall business uses that is explained here. A 'sealed' or 'shuttered' mall is what we think of when we think of an empty, abandoned mall.

http://www.deadmalls.com/dictionary.html

Dead Mall: A mall with a high vacancy rate, low consumer traffic level, or is dated or deteriorating in some manner. For purposes of inclusion on this site, Deadmalls.com defines a dead mall as one having a occupancy rate in slow or steady decline of 70% or less.

Mall Categories:

first class mall…. regular operating mall
second class mall… high vacancy, or non-traditional store occupancy
third class mall… areas or entire mall sealed from public
fourth class mall… shuttered or slated for demolition
fifth class mall… redevelopment has begun, or is completed

Here’s a list of dead malls.

It is interesting that Alabama has eight dead malls, and California has only 12 dead malls.

Also, New York has a ton of dead malls, but they don’t seem to be in New York City.

Maine has only one dead mall. Compare that to Ohio, which has 27 dead malls.

I am reminded of the pre-election maps of the US, which showed strong support for President Trump in the southeast and the midwestern and northeastern ‘rust belt’. But New England and the western US did not favor Trump. After the election, the maps showed that rural areas all over US, even places that did not like Trump, voted for Trump anyway.

The places with a plague of dead malls seem like a mirror image of Trump Land, even upstate New York.

What is going on?

From 2014, photographs and commentary by the artist Seph Lawless of defunct shopping malls.

“It’s a powerful symbol of America’s economic decline,” said Lawless. “I used to visit these malls often growing up. I remember eating cotton candy underneath the escalator and the sounds of people laughing and feet shuffling as the gentle sounds of falling water from one of the many fountains surrounded me. This was America.”

Two years later, Lawless has more photos, but with a change in perspective.

He said the story of Metro North is more about the change in American society than its economic demise. For one thing, the wrecking ball is sparing the Macy’s (M) anchor store. And rather than leaving the ruins to the rats, city developers are rebuilding the site as an open-air shopping center.

Lawless said the area around the mall is thriving with neighboring stores and businesses, and developers believe that shoppers want a retail space open to the elements, not the enclosed mall that used to be hallmark of American society.

“Their communal space is social media,” he said. “They don’t need to go to a mall where they can walk around, meet with people. There’s no need for that large enclosed space.”

But many of the other dead malls that Lawless has photographed are casualties of economic malaise in depressed regions of the Rust Belt that were once thriving.

“I’ve watched it grow. I’ve watched these large spaces become abandoned, he said. “It’s a depressing journey. It’s been a sober journey.”

He said that people who lived in those areas felt ignored and cut off from the rest of America, which is why many of them voted for Donald Trump for president: They felt he was listening to them.

“The country has definitely changed drastically in parts, and it’s an important thing for people to see,” Lawless said. “People see [dead malls] as America thriving at one point, and people what that kind of America back.”

The US is not in decline, rural areas are in decline.

But this has been going on for some time.

In the 19th century, Americans were farmers; by the 1930s, Americans were factory workers; by the 1970s, they were office workers; today, they are … truck drivers.

So today’s economy is reflected in TV shows like “The King of Queens”, where the husband is a FedEx deliveryman and his wife is an executive secretary. But they don’t live in a small town, they live in Queens, NY.

See also: “Is commercial real estate going to drive the next financial crisis?

Another one of my mother’s missives

Yesterday I came across what appears to be a draft letter to the editor written by my mother. It’s typed on “Season’s Greetings” stationary with an island theme, featuring Santa in a bathing suit carrying a frisbee, followed by a reindeer weighted down with surfboard, towels, beach mats, and other gear.

The draft is dated: March 17, 2006, two months before her 92nd birthday.

It’s not her most elegant letter, but it does make a point. She was offended by the idea of tearing down a perfectly good house, in this case a recently renovated one, in order to build an extravagant new structure still zoned for single family use.

I have no indication it was ever sent or published.

It has come to my attention that a home next to ours on Kealaolu that was renovated less than two years ago at an extensive cost, is to be bulldozed for the construction of a new multimillion dollar project.

I had an opportunity to inspect the house this morning and was amazed to find such an elaborate interior. All new inlaid bamboo floors, lighting fixtures valued in the thousands, kitchen and bathroom drainboards in specialized granite, bathroom mirrors and cabinets the best, kitchen and bathroom fixtures all first class.

I have heard the comment that there should be a law against pulverizing a very livable home to be replaced by a huge unlivable place the law says can only accommodate a single family. The lots in our area are about 12,000 foot average. I’m told that with the value of the lots in the area now, one cannot afford to keep an average bungalow type house in place. I cannot help but wonder if this same thinking is going on in other parts of the country where property values are beginning to skyrocket.

House for sale in Kaaawa

Not just any house. It’s our former home.

[text]We were out in Kaaawa again over the weekend, and were surprised to find that our former house is for sale again, just 18-months after we sold it.

In the interim, it’s had major renovations, with remodeled kitchen & bathrooms, new interior doors, new lights, ceiling fans, new flooring and paint throughout, and upgraded electrical and plumbing.

We heard through the neighborhood gossip network that the family that bought it from us underestimated the logistics involved in living in such a beautiful spot. With both parents working and two children now dealing with school and other activities, the commute to town–about 26 miles–quickly got to be too much.

I can certainly appreciate that. We were lucky to almost always have been able to arrange our lives to avoid peak traffic hours, and with just one car, the commute offered a daily opportunity for long, open-ended conversations and lots of NPR listening. But we didn’t have the challenges that kids introduce to the equation.

In any case, it’s a great house in a primo location in Kaaawa.

It’s listed on Zillow, with additional photographs available here.

Event to challenge “systemic barriers to justice”

A gathering dubbed “The People’s Congress” is being held this weekend in Honolulu, according to a press release from a coalition of sponsoring groups.

The two day event, which is scheduled to run all day Saturday and Sunday, aims to bring together people and groups “working to end systemic barriers to justice in Hawai’i.”

Workshops and panels will address a range of issues, from affordable housing and “Preferred Futures in Public Education” to what can be done to reduce the influence of big money in politics and elections.

Take a look at the full schedule and you’ll likely find some discussions of interest.

The weekend events will be at the KUPU Net Shed, 725-F Ala Moana Blvd. in Honolulu.

The conference is free, but advance registration is required.

Sponsoring organizations include Unite Here! Local 5 Union, and the Local 5-backed Aikea Movement, along with a number of other groups, including Community Alliance on Prisons, Hawai?i Alliance for Progressive Action (HAPA), Hawai?i Appleseed Center for Law and Economic Justice, Hawai?i Center for Food Safety (HCFS), Hawai’i People’s Fund, Hawai‘i SEED, Hawai‘i Teachers for Change Caucus, Hawai‘i’s Thousand Friends, Hawai’i Wildlife Fund, KAHEA: Hawaiian Environmental Alliance, Life of the Land, Maui Tomorrow, Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation (NHLC), Sierra Club of Hawai`i, the Aloha ‘Aina Project.

The People’s Congress follows a series of forums held last month on Kauai, Oahu, Maui, and Hawaii Island. According to the People’s Congress website, the forums drew “over 300” participants. Given the number of organizations involved, that seems quite a modest turnout for a series of events meant to build up to this weekend’s Congress.