The Gold Coast Bulletin

HAPPY 40TH PACIFIC FAIR

THE Gold Coast’s best-loved shopping centre opened its stores to customers for the first time 40 years ago today. The design of Pacific Fair was influenced by Disneyland and it featured special pavers so barefoot shoppers wouldn’t burn their feet in summe

- ANDREW POTTS andrew.potts@news.com.au

FROM tee-pees and pink lotus flowers to a modern shopping centre, Pacific Fair has gone through dramatic changes in its lifetime.

Today is its 40th anniversar­y but the dream that became one of the Gold Coast’s most famous shopping destinatio­ns was conceived more than 50 years ago.

Plans for Pacific Fair were first drawn up in 1963, but planning was put on hold through the late 1960s.

Things kicked into high gear in 1970 after the opening of what was then Queensland’s largest shopping centre, Southport’s Sundale in 1968.

McDonnell and East were named the initial anchor tenants, followed by Coles and Kmart in December 1975.

The latter two continue to operate in the centre today.

The site in mind was a “dreary swamp land” bordering Little Tallebudge­ra Creek canal near the Broadbeach Lennons Hotel.

Hooker Retail Developmen­ts was the company responsibl­e for the centre, which was designed by the firm’s English-born state manager John C. Barrett and architect “Big” Bill Job.

Mr Job spent two months in the US, Canada, Sweden and the UK inspecting cutting-edge shopping centres and admitted the final design was heavily inspired by Disneyland.

Hooker initially planned for the ’70s-era centre to be the first stage of a larger developmen­t, something which would eventually be realised in coming years.

“The imaginativ­e design of the centre, from its chlorinate­d lakes to its paved walkways immediatel­y sets shoppers at their ease,” Mr Barrett told the Bulletin in 1976.

“We spent about 16 weeks putting special brick paving throughout the centre.

“Not only does it look good but it’s cool on the feet of shoppers who can’t be bothered wearing shoes.”

In its initial configurat­ion, the centre was spread over 16.6 hectares and was expected to attract shoppers and tourists from as far away as Ipswich and Murwillumb­ah.

It had around 3000 car spaces and was initially managed by Brisbane-born retired World War II Commando Bob Mallon.

McDonnell and East’s Pacific Fair shop was marketed as “space-age retailing”, becoming the state’s first fully computeris­ed department store and among six in the entire country.

It was described as a “marriage between advanced computer technology and a new retail venture”.

The shopping centre was split into multiple zones harking back to different parts of the world.

Among those was Regent Street, filled with mock-Tudor architectu­re to celebrate “Merry Olde England”. It featured a chemist, bookshop and eateries as well as executive suites.

The Concourse was Pacific Fair’s main thoroughfa­re and still exists today, featuring Kmart, which remains in its original location, the Coles New World supermarke­t and “the Indian Village” which featured tee-pee inspired shops.

The Central Lake included seafood restaurant­s while the French Quarter was full of “charming shops and quaint kiosks built around a fountain. Basin Street was a New Orleans-inspired American zone.

Others included Waimanu Place, a Pacific Island-theme zone, the European-inspired Linden Strasse and the Australian Colonial area.

The centre proved to be a huge success in its early years, welcoming big crowds and necessitat­ing expansion. In 1982, the centre expanded to include a Myer, it relocated and enlarged its Coles, and added another 32 specialty stores.

The early ’90s were a busy time bringing the addition of a “village”, California Ave, a fourlevel Myer, 50 specialty stores, a 700sq m expansion to Coles and a fresh-food marketplac­e.

Eventually the old Myer building was converted to a two-level enclosed mall which was opened in October 1992.

Two years later, the McDonnell and East store closed, allowing Target and Toys R Us to take over the area some time later.

In 1996, the marketplac­e name was changed to West-

side, and the Birch Carroll and Coyle Senstadium 12-theatre cinemas opened in March the following year. The first film screened was the special-edition re-release of Star Wars.

In late 1998, Daimaru opened a 14,000sq m store to much fanfare but the chain later withdrew from the Aus- tralian market and stopped trading in 2002.

The area was reconfigur­ed to accommodat­e 22 new stores.

In 2007, owners AMP Capital Retail Trust, the AMP Capital Shopping Centre Fund and the AMP Capital Diversifie­d Property Fund lodged a developmen­t applicatio­n to increase Pacific

Fair by 40,000sq m. It was put on hold for five years when the global financial crisis hit.

The redevelopm­ent was approved in 2014, with more than $670 million spent to modernise the centre. The work was completed last year, 40 years after constructi­on began.

 ??  ?? Bird’s-eye view of Pacific Fair in the mid-1980s.
Bird’s-eye view of Pacific Fair in the mid-1980s.
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 ??  ?? Pacific Fair’s famous passenger train in the 1980s
Pacific Fair’s famous passenger train in the 1980s
 ??  ?? The Indian Teepee Village in the centre’s early days
The Indian Teepee Village in the centre’s early days
 ??  ?? Kmart circa the 1980s. It was an original anchor store
Kmart circa the 1980s. It was an original anchor store
 ?? Picture: City Libraries Local Studies Collection ?? ‘Merry Olde England’ shops
Picture: City Libraries Local Studies Collection ‘Merry Olde England’ shops

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