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Showing posts with label Memphis Malls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memphis Malls. Show all posts
Memphis' Raleigh Springs Mall


As the circa-'71 logo attests, RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL was "developed-owned-operated" by Youngstown, Ohio's Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation.
Graphic from the Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation


An aerial view of the newly-completed complex. It was the only Tennessee property developed by DeBartolo and corporation.
Photo from http://www.mallmemories.com


A Preview Opening was held in September 1971, with fourteen operational stores. 
Advert from the Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation 

RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL in late 1972. The single-level, fully-enclosed complex spans approximately 876,900 leasable square feet and houses seventy-one stores and services. Free parking is provided for 5,000 autos. 

Lowenstein's, a Memphian department store chain, was one of four anchors at the original RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL. The 2-level "fashion store," which encompassed 63,000 square feet, opened in February 1972. It was the third branch in the Lowenstein's chain.
Photo from City Stores Company Annual Report 1972


RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL was expanded on two occasions. Goldsmith's enlarged their store in 1979. Dillard's more than doubled the size of theirs in 1985. With these additions, the mall had grown to approximately 1,003,900 leasable square feet. There were still over seventy stores and services. 
Graphic from the Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation

The Main Entrance was remodeled during a long-awaited, year 2000 renovation. This 11 million project was an attempt to revitalize the mall, which was being usurped by the glitzy WOLFCHASE GALLERIA.
Photo from Wikipedia / Thomas R. Machnitzki

By 2001, RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL is in a downward spiral that it will never escape from. Dillard's and Penney's have been demoted into a Clearance Center and Outlet Store. A Food Court, envisaged in the the mid-'90s, was never built. The good news is, an empty Woolworth has been repurposed as a new 12-screen megaplex.

RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL TENANTS 2001:

DILLARD'S CLEARANCE CENTER / GOLDSTEIN'S (with Beauty Salon) / J.C. PENNEY OUTLET STORE (with Optical Department)  / SEARS (with Optical Department & freestanding Auto Center) / Alpha Omega Wireless / American Deli / Ashley Stewart Woman ladies' wear Averil Air / Bank of America (outparcel) / Bath & Body Works cosmetics / Beauty on the Go ladies' wear / Brothers Jewelers / Carlton Cards/ Champs Sports / Charley's Steakery / Chick-fil-A / Citi Trends ladies' wear / City Gear / Claire's Boutique / Cookie Jar / Eve's Shoes / Finish Line / Firestone Tire & Auto (outparcel) / Foot Locker / Footaction USA / Fotto Star / GNC / Gordon's Jewelers / Greg's Men & Boys Store / Heaven & Earth Floral Shop / Heavenly Products / Holliday's Fashions ladies' wear  / InZone Racing / Jackson Hewitt Tax Service / Jewel Time / Jewelry Center / K·B Toys / Kids Foot Locker / Lady Foot Locker / LensCrafters / Lisa Akbari's Hair Nutrition (kiosk) / Marty's Store For Men / Mitchell's Formal Wear / Nail Pro / New Trends / No Limit Wireless / Omega Jewelers / Opinion Center / Oxford Gold & Diamonds / Pager's Unlimited / Palermo Pizza / Parfum & Fashion / Payless ShoeSource / Payne's Fashions / Pride Mini-Mart / Radio Shack / Rainbow Incorprated / Raleigh Gifts / Raleigh Springs Mall Cinema 12 / Rave / Regis Hairstylists / Rodella Candy (kiosk) / Roma Men's Fashions / Simply Fashions  / Star East / The Barber Shop / Time Zone / Touchtel Wireless / US Kids Incorporated / Untouchables Photography / Video Images / Vitamin World (kiosk) / Waldenbooks / World Diamond Center / Zales Jewelers


Goldmith's, the J.C. Penney Outlet Store and Dillard's Clearance Center were history by mid-2003. This left Sears as the shopping center's only operational department store. Sears went dark in April 2011.
Photo from www.labelscar.com / "Caldor"

RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL bit the proverbial dust in mid-2017. The cleared shopping center site was redeveloped as the RALEIGH SPRINGS CIVIC CENTER; a mixed-use retail, civic and recreational complex. Above, we see the new Public Library.
Photo from Wikipedia / "Orual1963"


An MPD Traffic Division precinct is another part of the new CIVIC CENTER complex.
Photo from Wikipedia / "Orual1963"
RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL
Austin Peah Highway and Yale Road
Shelby County (Memphis), Tennessee

Youngstown, Ohio's Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation was the mid-20th century's most prolific shopping mall developer. After opening his first mall project in Mentor, Ohio in 1961, "Mr. D" established a shopping center empire that eventually stretched between New York State, Florida, Washington State and Southern California. 

By late 1980, DeBartolo & company had built thirty-nine mall-type retail centers. Greater Memphis' RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL was DeBartolo's sole Volunteer State endeavor. At the time of its official dedication, the shopping hub was located in an unincorporated section of Shelby County known as Raleigh. It would be annexed into the City of Memphis in 1973.

The Raleigh community had developed, in the 19th century, around the Raleigh Springs, whose artesian water was reputed to have medicinal and curative powers. A large inn was completed in 1892. However, by the early 20th century, the  resort had fallen out of favor. Within a few more years, the spring had dried up. 

Fast forward to June 1970. Ground is broken at a 63.5-acre parcel, located 9.3 miles northeast of center city Memphis. When fully-realized, RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL will encompass approximately 876,900  leasable square feet. It's first operational tenant, a 2-level (132,000 square foot), Memphis-based Goldsmith's, opened its doors on August 11, 1971. 

A 1-level (176,000 square foot) Sears was inaugurated -along with twelve inline stores- on September 29, 1971. New tenants included Mary Jane Shoes, Zales Jewelers, Chess King, Florsheim Shoes, Thom McAn Shoes and Spencer Gifts. The General Cinema Corporation Raleigh Springs Cinema I & II showed its first features on November 24, 1971.

J.C. Penney's 2-level (194,000 square foot) unit welcomed its first shoppers on January 26, 1972. The fourth -and final- anchor, a 2-level (63,000 square foot), Memphis-based Lowenstein's, was dedicated on February 27, 1972. A (47,000 square foot) F.W. Woolworth 5 & 10 -and Harvest House Cafeteria- were dedicated on April 12, 1972, with a (10,900 square foot) Walgreen Drug opening its doors on July 27th. 

By the time of the mall's first anniversary, in September 1972, seventy-one stores and services were in operation. These included Merry-Go-Round, Card Cage, Lerner Shops, Richman Brothers, The County Seat, Butler's Shoes,  Jaccard's Jewelers, The Swiss Colony, Male Call, Tall & Big Men Shops, The Children's Photographer, and King's Row Furniture Shop.

For its first 10 years, RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL was the preeminent shopping center in Greater Memphis. Its only commercial counterpart was SOUTHLAND MALL (1966) {14.8 miles southwest, in Memphis}. In 1981, two new regional retail centers were dedicated. HICKORY RIDGE MALL {10.7 miles southeast, in Memphis} and MALL OF MEMPHIS {10.1 miles south, in Memphis}. These were joined by OAK COURT MALL {6.8 miles south, in Memphis} in 1988.

The first anchor nameplate change at RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL took place following the demise of Lowenstein's, on January 2, 1982. Little Rock-based Dillard's acquired the Lowenstein's store and re-opened it under a Dillard's nameplate on March 31, 1982.

Goldsmith's expanded their RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL store in the late 1970s. Several departments were enlarged, a Goldsmith's Home Store refurbished, a rooftop parking deck built and new Green Leaf Restaurant added. The (172,000 square foot) unit was re-dedicated on August 12, 1979. Dillard's mall store was expanded in the mid-1980s. This 2-level (150,000 square foot) mercantile held its grand re-opening on March 7, 1985. With these additions, RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL covered approximately 1,003,900 leasable square feet.

RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL faced a formidable retail rival in February 1997. WOLFCHASE GALLERIA {6.6 miles southeast, in Shelby County} quickly assumed the position of dominant shopping center in the region. RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL was soon in a downward spiral.

J.C. Penney was demoted to an Outlet Store in March 1999. Dillard's followed suit, with its Clearance Center being established  on August 27, 1999. Meanwhile, the Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group had acquired RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL as a result of their 1996 merger with the DeBartolo Realty Corporation.

In an attempt to curtail the mall's decline, Simon announced an 11 million dollar makeover in February 2000. During Phase One, new floors, ceilings and skylights were installed. The Main Entrance was also rebuilt. A re-grand opening was held on November 24, 2000. The Phase Two project repurposed a vacant Woolworth space, which had been sitting vacant since late 1993. It was reconfigured as the Malco Raleigh Springs 12. This new movie house held its grand opening on July 4, 2001.

Alas, the renovation of RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL was unsuccessful. The J.C. Penney Outlet Store closed for good January 25, 2003, followed by the shutterings of Goldsmith's and Dillard's, in April. This left the mall with only Sears and the Malco multiplex to sustain it. A deal with Wal-Mart, to raze the vacant Penney's and replace it with a SuperCenter, fell through in June 2009.

In October 2009, Raleigh, North Carolina's Whichard Real Estate acquired the shopping center. Its final operational anchor, Sears, went dark April 3, 2011. The J.C. Penney structure, vacant since 2003, had been severely vandalized over the years. The dilapidated building was knocked down in December 2012.

An entity known as Raleigh Springs Mall, Limited Liability Company purchased five of the mall's ten land parcels in May 2013. Simultaneously, The City of Memphis, who owned (or was closing on) the remaining five parcels, announced a redevelopment plan for the moribund mall. This project would entail complete demolition of the structure and construction of an open-air retail, office and entertainment complex encompassing 700,000 square feet.

Tentatively known as RALEIGH SPRINGS CIVIC CENTER, it would cost approximately 66 million dollars and feature 100,000 square feet of retail, a farmer's market, skateboard park, two lakes, walking trails, a Memphis Public Library branch and Memphis Police traffic precinct. The plan was approved by the Memphis City Council in March 2014.

Meanwhile, Raleigh Springs Mall, LLC was pursuing a modest renovation and retenanting of the existing mall. They filed suit against the City of Memphis and won their case in August 2015, presenting a major stumbling block to the city's demolition and redevelopment plan. 

Alas, all issues and litigation were eventually resolved. Demolition began, in earnest, in March 2017 and was complete by June. The new mixed-use facility, known as RALEIGH SPRINGS CIVIC CENTER, was officially dedicated on November 19, 2020.

Sources:

The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tennessee)
The Memphis Press Scimitar
http://www.labelscar.com / "Caldor"
“I Remember Raleigh” / M. Winslow Chapman
http://thewhileyreport.blogspot.com
http://www.bizjournals.com
Shelby County, Tennessee tax assessor website
https://www.cinematreasures.org
"Raleigh Springs Mall" and "Raleigh Springs Civic Center" articles on Wikipedia
Memphis' Poplar-Highland Plaza


A bonnie lass was used for the logo of the Mid-South's original suburban-style shopping center. The first stores at POPLAR HIGHLAND PLAZA opened between April 1949 and October 1952.
Graphic from Poplar Highland Plaza, Incorporated


A Memphis-based Lowenstein's was the first operational POPLAR-HIGHLAND PLAZA store. "Lowenstein's-East" included a "Grillette" restaurant on its lower level.
Drawing from the City Stores Company

Over the decades, Kroger has operated in three different PLAZA stores. The first -depicted here- opened in April 1952. 
Drawing from the Kroger Company


The big news at the PLAZA in 1952 was the completion of adjacent J.C. Penney and J.G. McCrory stores. Both opened on the same day in October.
Photo from the Digital Archive of Memphis Public Libraries / LaVerne Dinwiddie


A Britling cafeteria (a.k.a. "Britling's East") welcomed first diners in April 1956.
Drawing from Britling Cafeterias


Our first PLAZA plan dates to 1959. It had taken 10 years, and several construction phases, to complete the basic footprint. The cluster mall now encompassed approximately 456,600 leasable square feet and contained forty-one tenant spaces. All store blocks had basements. Four had upper levels. Free parking was also provided for 1,800 autos.


A late '50s view of the new north and northeast store blocks. From left to right are Kroger, Woolworth's, Walgreen Drug and Bond Clothes.
Photo from the Bluff City News Company


Over the years, the official name of the complex morphed into POPLAR (sans "highland") PLAZA. In 1986, there were fifty stores in the directory. These included Center Stage Dancewear, David's Home Fashions, Fox Photo, Hecht's Suburbia and The Telephone Store. There was also a 10-tenant mall within a mall known as Poplar Plaza Gallerie.
Graphic from the Finard Company

 
The PLAZA began to decline in the early 1980s. It was renovated, repositioned and retenanted between 1991 and 1996. The complex now housed approximately 571,000 leasable square feet. During its 1990s overhaul, several big box-type stores had set up shop. These included Old Navy, Bookstar (a subsidiary of Barnes & Noble) and Party City.

Spin Street, a music & video emporium, operated in the original Lowenstein's East space between 2004 and 2018.
Photo from http://www.finardproperties.com / Finard Properties


The Plaza Theatre shut down in 1987 and was proceeded by a Bookstar store. This went belly-up in January 2011. The space was divided between Gould's Day Spa, Momentum Rehab and an Osaka Japanese restaurant. These opened during 2012.
Photo from www.cinematreasures.org / "Vastor"


Above we see one of two store blocks that were vacated in 2012. These were demolished to make room for a new state-of-the-art Kroger.
Photo from http://www.landmarkandlegend.com

Our final PLAZA plan dates to 2013. The 60+ year-old shopping center is, by now, a "Home of the Blues" institution. A sixth expansion and renovation has just been completed, which adds the aforementioned Kroger (light gray)

POPLAR PLAZA TENANTS 2013:

K & G MEN'S / KROGER / OLD NAVY / PETCO / Baskin-Robbins ice cream / Belleview / Body Mechanix / Bronson Sporting Goods / Buffalo Wild Wings / Cici's Pizza / Dollar Tree / Ed Jones / El Portone / French Riviera / GNC / Goulds / Laser Quest / Mattress Firm / MCalister's / Midtown Internal Medicine / Mister Hats / Momentum Rehab / Osaka Japanese Fusion Bistro / Party City / Plaza Cleaners / Plaza Dental / Rainbow apparel / Regions Bank / Rosie's Nails / Shelby County Clerk / Smoothie King / Spin Street records / State Farm Insurance / Tuesday Morning 


The new supermarket, which was the third Kroger location at the PLAZA, opened its doors in March 2013.
Photo from http://www.avisonyoung.com / Avison Young Real Estate Company


Today's Old Navy store occupies the old J.C. Penney building. 
Photo from http://www.avisonyoung.com / Avison Young Real Estate Company
POPLAR-HIGHLAND PLAZA
Poplar Avenue / US 72 and Highland Street
Memphis, Tennessee

The story of Tennessee's first post-war shopping center begins in 1945. Plans for a "gigantic commercial development" are announced. This complex will be built on a 25.5-acre parcel, located 5.2 miles east of Memphis' center city. The property, which had been in the Golightly family for over 80 years, was sold to Memphian John B. Goodwin in September 1945.

POPLAR-HIGHLAND PLAZA was developed by a joint venture of Goodwin, the Joyner-Heard Company and 20th Century-Fox Pictures. The cluster-type complex was designed by Memphis' Everett Dedman Woods. A ground breaking was held on March 14, 1948, with a Memphis-based B. Lowenstein & Brothers being built. The 3-level (30,000 square foot) Lowenstein's East store opened for business on April 2, 1949.

A second phase of construction added a theater building. Among its eight tenants was a (4,800 square foot) Walgreen Drug, which was dedicated on March 31, 1952. A (12,000 square foot) Kroger opened its doors on April 1, 1952. The Augustine Cianciolo Plaza Theatre, a single-screen venue, showed its first feature on May 1st. Other theater building tenants were Kraus Cleaners, Paul's Shoes, a First National Bank branch and Gould's Beauty Salon.

A third building housed a  2-level (24,000 square foot) J.G. McCrory 5 & 10 and 2-level (35,300 square foot) J.C. Penney (which was the first Penney's store in Memphis). These mercantiles welcomed first shoppers on October 16, 1952. Claude A. Armor (Mayor of Memphis) cut a ceremonial ribbon at the Penney's dedication, with an address given by J.C. Penney, himself. A ribbon was also cut at the McCrory's main entrance. 

During a subsequent phase of development, Lowenstein's East was expanded. A western addition, and full upper level, were built. The enlarged store encompassed 3 floors and 91,800 square feet. A 3-level (27,500 square foot) Franklin Simon apparel shop was built on the west side of Lowenstein's East. The stores held simultaneous grand openings on September 7, 1954. 

A fourth store block was built, which housed the Britling East Cafeteria. This self-service restaurant joined the tenant list on April 10, 1956. A larger expansion was done in 1957-1958, which brought three additional store blocks and completed the basic plan for the center that had been drawn up 10 years earlier. 

Kroger relocated into a new (22,800 square foot) unit, which opened for business on July 15, 1958. A (19,500 square foot) F.W. Woolworth welcomed first shoppers on July 17th. Walgreen's relocated into their new (22,700 square foot) store on October 22, 1958. 

Stores were also built for Bond Clothes, Wise Dress Shop, Auto-Lec, The Bookshelf, Youngtown, Ed's Camera, Wright's men's and Poplar Plaza Bowling Lanes. With their completion, POPLAR-HIGHLAND PLAZA encompassed approximately 456,600 leasable square feet and housed forty-one stores and services.

By the mid-1960s, the name of the retail hub had been shortened to POPLAR PLAZA. Major shopping malls were beginning to appear in -and around- the River City. These were SOUTHLAND MALL (1966) {8.5 miles southwest, in Memphis}, RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL (1971) {6.3 miles northeast, in Shelby County} and OAK COURT MALL (1988) {1.8 miles southeast, also in Memphis}. 

The demise of the Lowenstein's chain, on January 2, 1982, brought Dillard's into the PLAZA. The Little Rock retailer opened, in the vacant Lowenstein's, on March 31, 1982. In 1984, Dillard's renovated the building, expanding into the old Franklin Simon space. This increased the square footage of Dillard's to 123,000 square feet. Kroger had also enlarged their store in the early 1980s, taking in a vacant Woolworth. A third addition would expand this Kroger to 55,000 square feet.

A face lift renovation of POPLAR PLAZA was proposed in September 1986. During the 2-year-long project, store facades were to be refurbished, buildings demolished, new signage installed and new tenants signed. A park greenspace was also proposed. As the renovation was being discussed, the shopping hub changed hands. It was acquired by a joint venture of Burlington, Massachusetts-based Finard & Company and Boston's Derex Development Corporation in November 1986.

The movie house had re-opened, as the General Cinema Corporation Plaza 1 & Plaza 2 Theatre, on June 27, 1973. It was shuttered on September 30, 1987. Soon after, the J.C. Penney and McCrory stores pulled up stakes. By mid-1988, it was clear that the proposed remodeling had gone south. The only building that had been renovated was Dillard's.

Refurbishment of the shopping center finally got underway in March 1991. An entity known as Western Companies was brought in to manage and retenant the virtually vacant complex. 3.5 million dollars would be invested in new facades, landscaping and signage. 17,900 square feet of store space was added and a slew of new tenants signed. 

These included Applebee's restaurant, New York Suit Exchange, Home Decorating Warehouse and Office America. A Bookstar store opened, in the vacant cinema, on March 27, 1992. At the same time, several long-time tenants shuttered their stores. Dillard's went dark on February 1, 1992. Britling Cafeteria served its final meal on November 29, 1992. Walgreen Drug shut down in January 1995.

The vacant Dillard's was sectioned into six spaces. Party City began business in August 1993, Blockbuster Music Plus in May 1994 and PetCare in June 1996. The old J.C. Penney became an Office America store in January 1992, but closed in May 1994. It was retenanted, as one of the first Old Navy stores, in mid-1995. The empty Walgreen Drug re-opened, as a K.B. Drug, in early 1996.

By June, the renovation and repositioning was complete. POPLAR PLAZA was fully-leased for the first time in several years. The cluster mall encompassed approximately 571,000 leasable square feet and contained forty-nine stores and services. One early tenant, known most recently as Big Daddy's Bowling Lanes, had not made the transition. It had caught fire on May 23, 1995 and never re-opened. 

In December 2002, new POPLAR PLAZA stores included Laser Quest, Petco, Spin Street, Mattress Firm, Tuesday Morning and K & G Men's Superstore. Kroger had been wanting to expand for years. They decided not to renovate again, but to build an entirely new store. A formal announcement was made in September 2010. In order to bring the new Kroger to fruition, two northwest store blocks would have to be vacated and demolished.

Nine tenants were moved to other locations within the center. These included Dollar Tree, GNC, Gould's Day Spa, Momentum Rehab and Rosie's Nails. The vacated store blocks were razed in April 2012. The 20 million dollar (86,500 square foot) Kroger was dedicated on March 20, 2013. The circa-1959 store had been demolished by the summer of 2013, with an expanded parking area taking its place.

Sources:

The Memphis Daily News
The Memphis Press-Scimitar
The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tennessee)
"Dual Anchor Shopping Centers 1952-1965" / Richard Longstreth
Shelby County, Tennessee Tax Assessor Website
http://landmarkandlegend.com "Landmark & Legend, Memphis TN"
http:..www.bizjournals.com
Dig Memphis / The Digital Archive of the Memphis Public Library
http://www.finardproperties.com / Finard Properties
https://www.cinematreasures.org
http://www.movie-theatre.org / Mike Rivest
 https://www.poplarplazashoppingcenter.com
Memphis' Southland Mall


A cotton boll was depicted on the original SOUTHLAND MALL logo. 
Graphic from Southland Mall, Incorporated


The Main Entrance of Tennessee's second fully-enclosed shopping center. SOUTHLAND was officially dedicated in August 1966. Nashville's fully-enclosed HARDING MALL had debuted -as the Volunteer State's first enclosed mall- in June.
Photo from Thompson's Community Service

SOUTHLAND was the first interior mall in -or around- Memphis and was among the first fully-enclosed malls in the Mid-South region. Its Center Mall fronted on an F.W. Woolworth 5 & 10. 
Photo from the Bluff City News Company


Another Center Mall view. The Strands of Mirror Fountain, in the foreground, was created by Beverly Pepper.
Photo from the Bluff City News Company


Goldsmith's, of Memphis, anchored the east end of the mall. The store was the chain's second branch.
Photo from www.labelscar.com / "Caldor"


In August 1966, SOUTHLAND MALL encompassed around 478,700 leasable square feet, housed fifty-one stores and services, and provided free parking for 4,000 autos. 

SOUTHLAND MALL TENANTS 1966:

GOLDSMITH'S (with Toney's Fruit Stand ) / SEARS (with Coffee House, Optical Department, Garden Shop and freestanding Auto Center) / F.W. WOOLWORTH 5 & 10 (with Snack Bar) / DEL "D" FARM supermarket / Art & Hobby Center / Ashley's ladies' wear / Baker's Shoes / Card Mart / Casual Corner ladies' wear / Catherine's  Stout Shop / Central Academy of Music / Contour Chairs / Dinstuhl's Candies / Florsheim Shoes / First National Bank of Memphis (outparcel) / Games Imported / Gay Nineties Barber Shop / Izzy Rosen's men's wear / John Gerber Company apparel / Gridiron Restaurant / Halpern's fabrics / House of Cruthirds home decor / Jacqueline Hats / Kilgore's Pet Shop / Lerner Shops ladies' wear / Levy's apparel / Murdock Acceptance Corporation / National Shirt Shops / Nip & Tuck children's wear / Merle Norman Cosmetic Studio / Pants Parlour / Paul's Shoes / Perel & Lowenstein jewelers / Piccadilly Cafeteria / Radefeld's Bakery / Radio Shack / Remon's Southland Beauty Salon / Richman Brothers men's wear / Rogers Children's Shoes / Singer Sewing Center / Size 5-7-9 Shops ladies' wear / Southland Delicatessen / Southland Optical, Incorporated / Spencer Gifts / Style Shoppe ladies' wear / The Gift Box / Thom McAn Shoes / Vogue Laundry Cleaners / Waldenbooks / Walgreen Drug (with The Grill)  

The mall's Piccadilly Cafeteria had 286 seats. It featured ornate decor, which included a Vermeer painting, circa-1780 Nuremberg porcelain stove and 9-foot-high medieval tapestry.
Drawing & graphic from Piccadilly Restaurants
  

With the opening of Sears Whitehaven, at SOUTHLAND MALL, there were ten Sears stores in Greater Memphis. 
Advert from Sears, Roebuck & Company


A SOUTHLAND logo montage is created using trademarks of 1966 charter tenants. Note the circular Del "D" Farm Foods symbol. This supermarket chain was owned and operated by a Louisiana-based subsidiary of Chicago's National Food Stores.


This circa-'66 ad promotes the latest meal specials at the Woolworth's Whitehaven Snack Bar. At this time, Woolworth's was the world's largest prepared food retailer.    
Advert from the F.W. Woolworth Company 

We zoom forward 48 years, to 2014. SOUTHLAND MALL was expanded twice in the 1970s. Goldsmith's grew southward (medium gray), while Sears added to its Upper Level. With these mofifications, the mall covered around 562,700 leasable square feet. 

SOUTHLAND MALL TENANTS 2014:

MACY'S / SEARS (with Optical Department and freestanding Auto Center) / 4Ever Young ladies' wear / A.H. Gifts & Car Tags / Air Kingz / American Deli / Ashley Stewart ladies' wear / Athlete's Foot / Brow Art 23 / City Gear apparel / Citi Trends ladies' wear / Curves ladies' wear / D's Designs / Dial & Design / Dollar Rose ladies' wear / Eve's Shoes / Eye Centric / First National Bank (outparcel) / Icon Men's Wear / Finish Line / Foot Action USA / Foot Locker / GM Diamonds / GNC /  GameStop / Glam Shoes / Gold & Gifts / Her-She ladies' wear / Hibbett Sports / Ice Time jewelry / Idol ladies' wear / International House of Pancakes (outparcel) / Kids Foot Locker / Lady Foot Locker / Lady's 1st Accessories / Mad Rags ladies' wear / Marty's Men's Wear / Milano Men's Wear / Mr. Goldman, VI jewelry / Name Game / Nappy By Nature / Perfumes & Shades / Pro Image / Public Safety Office / Rainbow ladies' wear / Romantic Moments / Rose's Nails / Royal Wireless / School Uniform / Shabach Music Store / Shades & More /  Shelby County Health Department / Shiekh Shoes / Silver Feet / Silver Time / Simply Fashon ladies' wear / South Wok chinese restaurant / Star Images / Stylish ladies' wear / Sweetness Sweet jewelry / T.J. Gifts II / The Barber Shop / The Fillin' Station restaurant / Touchtel Wireless / Town Express apparel / Uniquely Charmed / US Kids / Wireless 4U / ZOZ Cookie Shop


A contemporary view of the SOUTHLAND MALL Center Court. The mall was given face lift refurbishments in 1981, 1993 and 2004.
Photo from www.urbanretail.com / Urban Retail Properties


The SOUTHLAND Goldsmith's morphed into a Goldsmith's-Macy's in August 2003 and became a bona fide Macy's in March 2005. The store closed for good in March 2015.
Photo from www.loopnet.com
SOUTHLAND MALL
South Bellevue Boulevard / US 51 and Whitecap Road (Shelby Drive) 
Whitehaven (Memphis), Tennessee

The story of Greater Memphis' first shopping mall begins in March 1964, when plans for a "glass-topped shopping center" were first announced. On June 2, 1965, ground was broken at a 48.5-acre parcel, located 12 miles south of downtown Memphis, in suburban Whitehaven. 

A 5 million dollar, fully-enclosed mall was being built by a joint venture of Baltimore's Joseph Meyerhoff Corporation and the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company. SOUTHLAND MALL was designed by Herbert H. Johnson Associates, of Miami, and the Memphis firms Eason, Anthony, Mckinnie & Cox and Roy P. Harrover. The single-level complex, which covered approximately 478,700 leasable square feet, was officially dedicated on August 15, 1966.

SOUTHLAND MALL was originally anchored by a 1-level (105,000 square foot), Memphis-based Goldsmith's and 2-level (140,000 square foot) Sears. Among fifty-one charter stores and services were Florsheim Shoes, Spencer Gifts, Nip & Tuck, Singer Sewing Center, a (40,000 square foot) F.W. Woolworth 5 & 10, (11,250 square foot) Walgreen Drug, (22,000 square foot) Levy's and (19,000 square foot) Del "D" Farm supermarket.  

There were two parking area outparcels; a First National Bank of Memphis and Sears Auto Center. The interior of SOUTHLAND MALL featured an 850-foot-long, air-conditioned shopping concourse. The Constructivist Strands of Mirror sculpture, created by artisan Beverly Pepper, graced Center Mall.

The community of Whitehaven, including SOUTHLAND MALL, was annexed into Memphis on January 1, 1970. In 1971, South Bellevue Boulevard, which ran along the west side of SOUTHLAND MALL, was renamed Elvis Presley Boulevard. In the same year, RALEIGH SPRINGS MALL {9.7 miles northeast, in Shelby County (Memphis)} was dedicated.

Goldsmith's SOUTHLAND store was expanded to 148,000 square feet, with a grand re-opening held on August 12, 1972. A few years later, Sears' partial upper floor was also extended. That store now encompassed 172,000 square feet. With these improvements, the mall proper covered approximately 553,700 leasable square feet and housed over sixty stores and services.

In 1981, MALL OF MEMPHIS {5.8 miles northeast, in Memphis} and HICKORY RIDGE MALL {6.8 miles northeast, in Memphis} were completed. OAK COURT MALL {6.8 miles northeast, also in Memphis} made its debut in 1988.

As keeping up measures, SOUTHLAND was given face lift refurbishments in 1981 and 1993. During the first project, the Strands of Mirror sculpture was removed. The mall interior and north facade were refurbished, with all mall entrances rebuilt. The 600,000 dollar project got underway in October 1981 and was completed in April 1982. 

A second remodeling was done between June and November of 1993. The sloping floor of the shopping concourse was leveled and recessed seating areas removed. New lighting, Italian tile flooring, kiosks and a new Center Mall fountain were installed, with mall entrances rebuilt again. 

The SOUTHLAND Woolworth store was shuttered in 1994 and re-opened, as a short-lived J.G. McCrory, in July of the year 2000. WOLFCHASE GALLERIA {11 miles northeast, in Shelby County} had been dedicated in 1997. With five major shopping malls in its trade area, SOUTHLAND somehow persevered. It even eclipsed one of its retail rivals, MALL OF MEMPHIS, which was demolished in 2004.

SOUTHLAND MALL had been sold to a joint venture of Raleigh-based Whichard Real Estate and Charlotte-based B.V. Belk Properties. The transaction closed in January of the year 2004. Goldsmith's at SOUTHLAND MALL was rebranded as a Goldsmith's-Macy's on August 1, 2003 and was Macy's-branded on March 6, 2005. 

A third face lift renovation was done between February and July of 2004. This time around, new landscaping was installed, the exterior painted and Main Entrance reconfigured. In January 2007, SOUTHLAND changed hands again. A New York City-based concern, Southland Mall Shopping Center, Limited Liability Company, assumed ownership and hired Chicago's Urban Retail Properties as a managing agent.
 
Bad tidings arrived in January 2015. Cincinnati-based Macy's, Inc. announced that the SOUTHLAND store would be shuttered. The store went dark in March, leaving the shopping hub with just one operational anchor. Sears eventually closed, with that store pulling up stakes in February 2019.

Meanwhile, the mall's owner defaulted on their loan, with the inline store section being auctioned off in March 2016. The new owner was an entity known as 1215 East Shelby Drive Holdings, Limited Liability Company. The inline store section of SOUTHLAND MALL was sold to a joint venture of Great Neck, New York's Namdar Realty Group and Mason Asset Management in December 2018.

Sources:

The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tennessee)
The Memphis Press-Scimitar (Memphis, Tennessee)
https://memphismagazine.com / Vance Lauderdale
http://www.southlandmallmemphis.com
https://namdarrealtygroup.com / Namdar Realty 
"Mall Of Memphis" and "Elvis Presley" articles on Wikipedia