Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 52344
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2025/05/25 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
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2009/1/8-12 [Reference/BayArea, Politics/Foreign/Europe] UID:52344 Activity:low
1/8     Macy's closing 11 stores:
        http://preview.tinyurl.com/9f6576 [newsday]
        \_ I wish I had saved this graph that compared retail space per
           capita between Britain, Sweden and the United States.  We had
           something like 20x-30x more retail space per capita which suggests
           there are a lot more store closings coming up.
           \_ Not necessarily. The US has a lot more land and our cities
              are spread far apart so there are a lot more locations per
              capita than in a more dense nation.
           \_ 20X? That seems unbelievable to me. -skeptic
           \_ Found the chart:

              http://www.oftwominds.com/photos07/retail-sq-ft.png

              US: 20.2 sf/person
              Sweden: 3.3 sf/person (Sweden has more land per person than the
              US).
              \_ Yes, but the population is not spread out much.
              UK: 2.5
              France: 2.3
              Italy: 1.1

              Note that according to http://tinyurl.com/6j2gtq US sf/person
              grew to 38 sf/person in 2005, but that same article claims
              European countries have 10 sf/person.  So the gap is anywhere
              from 4x to almost 20x depending on the source.

              -pp
              from 4x to almost 20x depending on the source. -pp
              \_ Where's the source data?
               \_ From the looks of that graph it is somewhere on
                  http://www.icsc.org/sct/index.php
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preview.tinyurl.com/9f6576 -> www.newsday.com/business/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-macys-glance,0,3802721.story
Indianapolis (84 employees, opened in 1974) -- Brookdale Center, Brooklyn Center, Minn. Louis (176 employees, opened in 1969) -- Natrona Heights Plaza, Natrona Heights, Pa.
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tinyurl.com/6j2gtq -> www.newrules.org/retail/news_slug.php?slugid=372
Chain retailers have announced plans to close more than 6,500 outlets by year's end, even as shopping center construction continues at a furious pace. Developers are on track to bring an estimated 137 million square feet of new retail space online this year. That's more than the average annual growth during the first half of the decade. "Alarming" is how one commercial brokerage described the unabated pace of shopping center construction. It is an indication of the degree to which the forces driving retail expansion have become untethered from actual consumer demand. Communities that have not taken steps to limit retail sprawl through their land use policies are at risk of seeing growing numbers of buildings become derelict. Already, vacancy rates at strip malls have reached a twelve-year high, according to the research firm Reis. For the first time since the firm started gathering data in 1980, the total amount of occupied retail space has begun to decline in absolute terms. That's roughly 12 billion square feet, or around 40 square miles of empty shopping space (plus perhaps another 100 square miles of unused parking lot). To put that into perspective, the total land area of the city of Miami is 36 square miles. "I would avoid anything related to commercial construction," advised Michael Larson, associate editor of Safe Money Report and an early predictor of the mortgage crisis. Last year, developers built 143 million square feet of new shopping centers and big-box stores. Another 137 million square feet is expected to be completed this year. This growth is on top of fifteen years of unprecedented expansion as big-box retailers sought to overpower independent businesses and competing chains by building ever more and bigger stores a problem compounded by billions of dollars in development subsidies doled out by local governments. Between 1990 and 2005, the amount of retail space per capita in the US doubled, from 19 to 38 square feet. In contrast, European countries generally have less than 10 square feet per person. This level of expansion has not been supported by population and income growth. Since the early 1990s, per capita retail spending, adjusted for inflation, has increased by only about 14 percent. By flooding markets with an excess of shopping space, chain retailers have not only caused a drop in customer traffic in downtowns and other areas home to independent businesses, but have increasingly cannibalized sales at older shopping centers and big-box stores, thousands of which are now vacant. The International Council of Shopping Centers has forecast that a total of 6,500 chain store closures this year. National statistics mask considerable variation in the degree of vacancy in different regions. Vermont and Oregon, which have relatively strong land use laws that place some constraints on development, are not overrun with nearly as many dark shopping centers as other regions. The retail vacancy rate in San Antonio, for example, is likely to rise to above 20 percent over the next year, according to experts. Shopping center vacancies in Tulsa are currently at 13 percent, the highest level in 14 years, while some two million square feet of additional retail space is now under construction there, according to CB Richard Ellis. Malone Commercial Brokers in Portland, Maine, reports that retail vacancy in the Greater Portland region tripled in the last year, even as more than 1 million square feet of new shopping space is in the pipeline for the coming year. In regions that have experienced a major housing boom and bust, such as Phoenix and Florida, the amount of ghost retail has risen sharply and includes stores that were built in advance of new outer-ring subdivisions but never occupied. The market has largely failed to check over-building in part because the chains routinely abandon their existing, mostly leased, locations for newer developments and also because much of the retail development industry is structured around short-term profits from new construction, rather than long-term property ownership. The ultimate losers are the communities that end up saddled with vacant, deteriorating structures and the independent businesses that struggle to maintain a viable customer base in a sea of excess retail. demolition bonds that can be used to tear down a building should it be abandoned and left idle. But, while these approaches can alleviate some of the symptoms, they do not address the underlying cause, which is over-building. Getting to the root problem requires enacting more prudent planning policies that set appropriate limits on retail development. Such policies not only help to protect communities from vacant shopping centers and big-box stores, but also foster more investment and activity in neighborhood and downtown business districts, strengthening and creating new opportunities for local businesses.
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www.icsc.org/sct/index.php
January 2009 WHICH ARE THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL MALLS? Find out in this month's cover story, which highlights the winners of ICSC's prestigious International Design & Development Awards. Center Stage: Randhurst Shopping Center, Mount Prospect, Ill. A vintage 60s enclosed mall welcomes 2009 as an open-air lifestyle center. Wal-Mart will work with hunger relief charity Feeding America to provide 90 million pounds of food to needy families this year. The credit crunch is causing more borrowers to default on their loans, creating a profitable opportunity for receivers.