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The future of the strip mall: downhill

Suburban strips with huge parking lots are losing favor, thanks to economic shifts, rising gas prices, and more appealing pedestrian-friendly town centers.

The future of the strip mall: downhill
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Ashli Blow

Suburban strips with huge parking lots are losing favor, thanks to economic shifts, rising gas prices, and more appealing pedestrian-friendly town centers.

For  more than 50 years, retailers have favored the commercial strip: a  linear pattern of retail businesses strung along major roadways  characterized by massive parking lots, big signs, box-like buildings and  a total dependence on automobiles for access and circulation.

For years planners have tried to contain and improve the strip.  Now  they are getting help from consumers and the marketplace.  The era of  strip development is coming to an end.  Evolving consumer behavior,  changing demographics, high-priced gasoline, Internet shopping — are all  pointing  to a new paradigm for commercial development.

Commercial strips are not going to disappear overnight.  But it is  becoming increasingly clear that strip retail is retail for the last  century. The future belongs to town centers, main streets and mixed-use  development. Here is why:

We're overbuilt on the strip

From 1960 to 2000 there was an almost tenfold increase in U.S. retail  space, from four to 38 square feet per person. For many years retail  space was growing five to six times faster than retail sales.  Most of  this space came in the form of discount superstores on the suburban  strip.

The recession proved  that we have too much retail.  Strip centers  are now littered with vacant stores. By some estimates, there is  currently over 1 billion square feet of vacant retail space,  much of  which  has to be re-purposed or demolished.

Retail is moving back to the city

Wal-Mart in late 2010 announced plans for its first-ever stores in  Washington D.C.   To make the new stores fit an urban environment, the  company has agreed to consider an array of new layouts, designs, and  parking arrangements.

The store planned for New Jersey Avenue illustrates Wal-Mart’s new  approach. The company plans a store of 75,000 to 80,000 square feet  (much smaller than usual) on the ground floor of a five-story mixed-use  building featuring 315 apartments, underground parking, and space for  small retail stores.

At the same time that Wal-Mart and Target are planning new urban  stores all over America, as many as 400 former big box stores sit vacant  on commercial strips.  Most analysts agree that urban neighborhoods are  the new frontier for retail: the one place left with more spending  power than stores to spend it in.

Traffic congestion, fuel prices and design are problems for the strip

Americans value convenience, but the perceived convenience of the  strip has been reduced as traffic congestion has worsened in recent  years.  Add to this the rising price of fuel and an overall physical  environment designed for cars, instead of people, and it’s  understandable why fewer people want to shop the strip and almost no one  wants to linger.

Town centers and Main streets provide a “place-making dividend” that  the homogenous blur of the strip can’t match. They also provide a “park  once” environment that will grow in importance if fuel prices rise. Just  imagine what will happen to strip development if gas prices hit $5 a  gallon or more, as some analysts predict.

The economy is restructuring the retail landscape

The recession saw the collapse of numerous big box chains, like  Circuit City and Linens 'n Things.  This helped send vacancy rates  soaring.  After three years on the brink, consumer confidence has  improved, but we can expect a new normal when it comes to retail  spending.  Why?  Because unemployment remains high, the days of  unlimited credit are over, and many analysts predict that a “new  consumer frugality” will be the norm for years to come.   What’s more,  strip centers without anchors (like grocery stores) and Class B malls  are virtually unfinanceable according to many experts.

We’re also moving into an era of hybrid shopping centers. Big boxes  are moving into the mall, and many malls  will more closely resemble  ol-fashioned main streets. Already, seven of the 13 regional malls in the  Denver metropolitan area have — like Belmar in Lakewood, Colorado — been  turned into mixed-use town centers.

Time-constrained lifestyles and boredom with the dull sameness of  most strip centers has meant a slow but steady decline in the number  and length of stays at strip malls.  People go to get what they want and  they leave.  A pleasant (i.e. cool) atmosphere is particularly  important to the GenY generation.  A mixed-use town center with street  life, outdoor dining, places to hangout and window shop is much more  likely to attract the affection and the dollars of young shoppers than  an auto-dependent strip.

E-Commerce means fewer and smaller stores

Today, the nation’s “healthiest” retailer is not Wal-Mart or Costco.  It is Amazon.   Amazon has exploited the increasing availability of  broadband Internet and mobile technology to build a retail superpower.   One of the biggest reasons why the strip is coming to an end is because  bricks-and-mortar stores are becoming a smaller part of the retail  landscape.

First, it was catalog shopping; now it is e-commerce, social media,  and mobile phones.  This means that retailers will seek smaller  footprints as merchandise categories move to online channels.  For  example, the rise of Netflix and streaming video means the inevitable end of  bricks-and motor video stores.  E-readers portend the end or at least  the downsizing of bookstores; ditto for music stores, Hallmark card  stores, and other merchandise categories.

None of this is meant to suggest that we won’t still have neighbor  centers with grocery stores, drugstores, coffee shops, etc.  We will.   But the endless expansion of the commercial strip — that homogenous blob  of sign clutter and asphalt that leads out from every town — is  reaching the end of its useful life.  A new paradigm is being shaped,  not just by regulation but by consumers and the marketplace.  Commercial  strips (i.e. road towns) with no beginning and no end, with no center  and no way to get around except by car, are becoming obsolete in an era  of shrinking stores, rising gas prices, discerning consumers and online  shopping.

Distributed by Citiwire.net.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal