Houston Chronicle

Megamall opens luxury wing amid COVID

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — If you build it during a pandemic, will they still come?

American Dream put that to the test when it opened the new luxury shopping wing of its megamall in September, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan in East Rutherford, N.J., featuring Saks Fifth Avenue, Dolce & Gabbana, Hermes and other luxury stores, along with exotic fish ponds, gardens and 16-foot sculptures.

Like everything about American Dream, the timing has been less than ideal. The new wing comes as the world grapples with the highly contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s, which continues to threaten life — and business — from returning to normal.

American Dream took nearly two decades — and lots of fits and starts in between — to become a reality. When it finally did open its doors in October 2019, the giant shopping and entertainm­ent complex was forced to close five months later as the coronaviru­s bore down on the globe.

It reopened last October with new safety protocols in place. But the pandemic has complicate­d its outlook, delayed expansion plans, cut off its cash flow and stolen internatio­nal visitors. American Dream also lost a handful of

key partners that either filed for bankruptcy — like Barneys New York, Century 21 and Lord & Taylor — or pulled out, like high-end retailer Moncler.

The new luxury wing marks the final constructi­on phase of American Dream’s retail and entertainm­ent offerings; it still has plans to add hotels. The luxury wing is expected to be a key highlight to the 3 million square feet of leasable space, more than half of which is dedicated to over a dozen entertainm­ent attraction­s like a 16-story indoor ski slope and a waterpark. By year-end, it will have leased more than 85 percent of its space, according to an American Dream representa­tive.

Ken Downing, chief creative officer of the mall’s owner Triple Five Group, acknowledg­ed a bumpy start but says he’s optimistic about American Dream’s future. The spring and summer months were “very popular” as people were looking for a safe place to shop, dine and get away, he said.

American Dream’s website says it’s constantly cleaning the facility. Employees are required to wear a mask regardless of vaccinatio­n status while tenants and visitors are encouraged to do the same. The company delayed fullservic­e indoor dining until the opening of a high-end Italian restaurant in its luxury wing.

On a recent weekday, the sound of drills and presence of constructi­on crews fixing up store interiors were a reminder that American Dream is still a work in progress. The mall had a constant stream of people, many of them masked, but it was clearly not crowded.

Downing says the weekends bring 75,000 people to American Dream, which features a mix of high- and low-price retail tenants. When it first opened, American Dream said the initial goal was 45 million to 50 million visitors in the first year. Officials didn’t directly address whether they met that goal. Downing says people are traveling from greater New York, New Jersey, Philadelph­ia area and as far as California and Florida, but that he’s looking forward to internatio­nal visitors, which should account for 20 percent of the overall base.

Triple Five, a Canada-based mall and entertainm­ent conglomera­te, took over American Dream in 2011 from two developers and reimagined it as a community hub for tourists and locals, taking a page from two other malls it had developed: West Edmonton Mall in Canada and Mall of America in Bloomingto­n, Minn. — the two largest malls in North America.

But the nearly seven-month closure of American Dream caused the company to default on an underlying mortgage.

The pandemic has hurt malls in general. Still, analysts say the high-end ones have been more resilient while low-end malls have suffered.

The average vacancy rate for all malls across the country climbed by around 2.2 percentage points from the end of 2019 to the second quarter of 2021 and now hovers at 7.4 percent, says CoStar Group, a real estate research firm. The toptier malls are seeing vacancies average 4.5 percent as of this year’s second quarter, while the bottom-tier have experience­d a much greater slowdown, with an average of around 13 percent.

Daniel Hodges is CEO and founder of Retail Store Tours, which offers tours to retail executives at prime destinatio­ns to inform them of best retail practices. He says he’s bullish on American Dream, noting a combinatio­n of entertainm­ent and its attention to detail like a meandering design that doesn’t overload shoppers, use of natural light and amenities like plenty of seating.

“It is a very stressful time for retail, especially when you are doing epic retail like American Dream but all the fundamenta­ls are strongly entrenched.” he said. “This is the future of retail.”

 ?? Seth Wenig / Associated Press ?? The Avenue, a luxury shopping wing of the American Dream mall in New Jersey, opened in September despite COVID still looming.
Seth Wenig / Associated Press The Avenue, a luxury shopping wing of the American Dream mall in New Jersey, opened in September despite COVID still looming.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States