Los Angeles Times

N.J. mall opens with high hopes and plans for ski slope

- By Anne D’Innocenzio and David Porter D’Innocenzio and Porter write for the Associated Press

More than two decades ago when a mega entertainm­ent and shopping complex was being conceived on a vast swath of swampland in New Jersey, the iPhone didn’t exist, Amazon was only selling books online and malls were where you went for all your shopping needs.

Now, after endless fits and starts and billions of dollars spent, American Dream is officially opening its doors to the public as the second-largest mall in the country, and third-largest in North America.

It will showcase 3 million square feet of leasable space dedicated to more than a dozen entertainm­ent attraction­s including a 16story indoor ski slope, a roller coaster and water park and, eventually, 450 retail, food and specialty shops.

The big question is: Who will come?

In today’s retail landscape, consumers are glued to their smartphone­s, where they can do their shopping without ever leaving their couch. Amazon has morphed into the biggest online retailer in the world. And overall traffic at malls, which had been on the rise in the late 1990s, has declined 10% since, according to an estimate by Coresight Research.

A report from Credit Suisse published two years ago predicted that up to a quarter of the shopping malls will close by 2022 given the increasing popularity of online shopping and a rash of store closings. Since 2015, only nine malls have been built, a dramatic fall from their peak constructi­on in 1973 of 43, according to CoStar Group, a real estate research firm.

Amid that new reality, American Dream is looking to draw 45 million to 50 million visitors in its first year. Entertainm­ent will account for more than half of its space, including such attraction­s as a bunny field and an aviary. There will also be a doggy day care and a luxury wing, where shoppers can sip Champagne and sample caviar as they wait for their designer handbags to be wrapped.

“You can make it your backyard playground if you live in Manhattan or even if you’re in New Jersey,” said Ken Downing, chief creative officer for Triple Five Group, the mall’s developer.

During the opening Friday, which was limited to a few thousand visitors, the smell of sawdust and sound of electric drills served as a reminder that the American

Dream is still a work in progress. Only two of the major entertainm­ent attraction­s were open: an ice-skating rink and the Nickelodeo­n Theme Park, although not all the rides were up and running.

American Dream won’t be fully operationa­l until next spring. The complex will unveil the rest of the attraction­s, including the ski slope and water park, by the end of the year; stores and restaurant­s will open in March.

At the ice-skating rink, spectators watched profession­al skaters do routines. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and his wife, Tammy, took a spin on one of the roller coasters, along with other state officials.

“The attraction is this,” said Giovanni Scolaro, who lives in nearby Elmwood Park, N.J., pointing to the amusement park. “I have a 7year-old child and grandchild­ren. This is going to be a draw.”

Canada-based mall and entertainm­ent conglomera­te Triple Five in 2011 took over the massive project originally dubbed Xanadu from two developers, whose plans included building the world’s largest Ferris wheel. The idea was envisioned in the late 1990s, but the project didn’t break ground until 2004.

It languished during the early years and its multicolor­ed, checkerboa­rd exterior — since removed — drew derision. Then-New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie called it “an offense to the eyes” and “the ugliest damn building in New Jersey and maybe America.”

The project was suspended in 2009 during the financial crisis after a Lehman Bros. affiliate failed to fund its share of the constructi­on. Creditors seized the project in 2010, and Triple Five came on board a year later, renaming it American Dream.

Triple Five re-imagined American Dream as a community hub for tourists and locals, taking a page from two other malls it had developed: the West Edmonton Mall in Alberta, Canada, and the Mall of America in Bloomingto­n, Minn. — the two largest malls in North America.

Entertainm­ent was a big selling point for both, accounting for 20% of the West Edmonton Mall’s space and 30% of Mall of America’s. That compares with the 6% average for U.S. malls, according to CoStar.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? VISITORS TO the American Dream megamall in East Rutherford, N.J., sample theme park rides on Friday. It’s the second-largest mall in the nation.
Richard Drew Associated Press VISITORS TO the American Dream megamall in East Rutherford, N.J., sample theme park rides on Friday. It’s the second-largest mall in the nation.

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