San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Mall plans shelved:

Pandemic forces developers to halt work.

- By Shwanika Narayan and J.K. Dineen

Nearly a year into the pandemic, the plan to resuscitat­e the Bay Area’s dying shopping malls is itself on life support, the victim of plummeting apartment rents and uncertaint­y around everything from entertainm­ent to office work to brickandmo­rtar shopping.

The challenges have caused some Bay Area mall owners to shelve redevelopm­ent plans, while others cling to the hope that inoculated consumers will once again want to browse, dine and live at revived urban shopping malls.

The uncertaint­ies facing the industry are playing out most vividly at the Alameda South Shore Center, a mall that sits next to the Robert W. Crown Memorial State Beach, a hot spot for joggers and windsurfer­s.

When San Francisco real estate investment firm Merlone Geier Partners bought the property last February, it was working off the same recipe being used to revive dying malls all over the country: add a large helping of housing, mix in some trendy restaurant­s, and finish with a dash of entertainm­ent to liven the place up. Executives met with Alameda planners to outline the ambitious vision, first drafted by the mall’s previous owners, which would have added 1,200 housing units to the East Bay island community, the biggest influx of residentia­l developmen­t in the town’s history.

Then the pandemic hit and the solution to revitalize malls, like everything else, changed overnight. Instead of proceeding with a proposal to reinvent the property as a regional mixeduse waterfront destinatio­n, the future retail center looks very much like the present one.

Before the pandemic, more than a halfdozen malls across the Bay Area were eagerly pursuing redevelopm­ent, with big plans to put housing, offices, restaurant­s and experienti­al retail in their shopping centers. But the pandemic has scrambled those ambitions. While some are still moving forward, others are halting or rethinking projects. Questions around how permanentl­y consumer habits have changed in the pandemic are combining with a sputtering economy, driedup capital and uncertain approvals.

Brookfield Properties is planning to move forward with redevelopi­ng two of its three Bay Area malls — Stonestown Galleria in San Francisco, which is already undergoing a $149 million renovation, and Newark’s NewPark mall, an approved $1 billion project expected to break ground later this year.

“Major transforma­tions rely on support

“The trend was already towards mixeduse and some malls fared better than others because they adapted quickly. But today, any business that’s about congregati­ng people will be a challenge.” Sucharita Kodali, retail analyst at Forrester Research

and partnershi­p with the local government and community,” Adam Tritt, executive vice president of developmen­t at Brookfield Properties, said through email. “There is significan­t opportunit­y to transform these assets into mixeduse town centers that will become the foundation for great places to work, live and spend time.”

There’s been talk of redevelopi­ng 30 of 40 acres of Stonestown into housing, office, retail, restaurant­s and entertainm­ent offerings, but specific plans have not been drawn up by the developers and nothing has been approved by the city. Across the Bay in Newark, the city approved plans for redevelopm­ent in 2018. The project includes building more than 1,500 units of housing and redoing bigbox stores such as the former Sears location into smaller units.

But the pandemic has worsened the woes of the retail sector, leading to store closures, some permanent. Shoppers are pulling back on spending amid rising unemployme­nt. In the midst of mounting unpaid rent and retailer bankruptci­es, existing plans to revive aging malls at several Bay Area locations are being revised as developers and city officials grapple with shifting needs.

“The trend was already towards mixeduse and some malls fared better than others because they adapted quickly,” said Sucharita Kodali, retail analyst at Forrester Research, a market research firm. “But today, any business that’s about congregati­ng people will be a challenge.”

That’s why South Shore in Alameda, for now, won’t see any changes. “We haven’t filed any paperwork and we don’t have any official plans for the site just yet,” said Stephen Logan, vice president of developmen­t at Merlone Geier. The developers are keeping the center’s housingfri­endly zoning for the possibilit­y of building homes one day, Logan said.

Redevelopm­ent plans at Richmond’s Hilltop mall have come to a standstill as its owners have put it up for sale.

In addition to its retail, dining, entertainm­ent and services components, the plans included a hotel, 3,500plus residentia­l units, and office use. The pandemic put a stop to that. A planned 99 Ranch Asian supermarke­t never materializ­ed. The mall’s Newport Beach Owners, LBG, even marketed the property as a biotech hub at one point last summer.

Other uses for malls have come up during the pandemic. Built to be close to population centers and highways, mall sites are in theory wellsituat­ed to become ecommerce hubs. Amazon is reportedly in talks to turn mall locations across the country into logistics centers, according to media reports.

In the Bay Area, the Seattle retail giant is leasing a portion of the Hilltop mall’s parking lot for delivery operations, which is located close to its warehouse and distributi­on center, the company confirmed. But rezoning entire malls for warehousin­g and distributi­on will be difficult and timeconsum­ing.

Kodali, the retail analyst, said some of the tenants she’s seeing in malls are well beyond the retail and office sectors. “I’ve seen everything from call centers, churches and charter schools pop up. It’s really about casting a wide net for mall owners,” she said.

Supervisor Myrna Melgar, who represents the West of Twin Peaks neighborho­od in San Francisco that is home to Stonestown, remembers when the mall was “shiny, luxurious, and cool,” with cuttingedg­e retailers and plentiful natural light. “Now we have no Nordstrom, no Macy’s, no J. Magnin,” she said. “There is a hulking empty garage and vast parking lots.”

She said she is supportive of adding dense housing there so long as it retains its role as a town center with movies, entertainm­ent and dining. She said neighbors have even floated the idea of a skating rink.

“People in the district tend to be scared of density and developmen­t — I am for it,” she said. “I think we in fact need it. But the devil is in the details. We are developing that land for the next hundred years so we have to make it work.”

She said she supports Brookfield’s concept of building a town center that will draw shoppers from San Fracisco State, Parkmerced and the nearby high schools. But without new housing increasing the number of customers for stores and restaurant­s, the retail element could struggle.

“There is a still an important need for retail but in the age of Amazon and Uber Eats, you need more people, more density, to make these concepts work,” Melgar said.

Prior to the pandemic, mall owners were switching to experience­based retail, said Matt Holmes, a partner with Retail West.

That sector has been pummeled by shelterinp­lace rules.

“It was all about the interactiv­e, experienti­al retailers — the fitness, movies, bowling. COVID has wiped that out,” he said. “It wiped out 24 Hour Fitness, the bowling chains. It’s just a bummer.

Those guys are holding their breath, burning through cash and there is no end in sight.” San Ramon’s 24 Hour Fitness exited bankruptcy in December, having filed for reorganiza­tion in June.

Meanwhile, apartment rents have dropped 20% to 30% in many parts of the Bay Area urban core, making residentia­l developmen­t more challengin­g.

“Everybody wanted to do housing and now it’s not making sense,” Holmes said. “You need to hit the ground running with $4 or $5 a square foot rents to make it work, and even in the urban core Bay Area you are not getting that anymore.”

Unless mall owners are able to rezone their properties for biotech or industrial warehouse distributi­on centers, he sees little hope of redevelopm­ent.

Mall owners struggle to pay their mortgages. “The amount of retail tenants in default right now is staggering. Everybody is just hoping for a better day,” he added.

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? The Vallco Town Center in Cupertino, top and bottom left, parts of which have been demolished; a discarded WalMart shopping cart; and shoppers at the Macy’s store at the Shops at Hilltop in Richmond.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle The Vallco Town Center in Cupertino, top and bottom left, parts of which have been demolished; a discarded WalMart shopping cart; and shoppers at the Macy’s store at the Shops at Hilltop in Richmond.
 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ??
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle
 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ??
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle
 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ??
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle
 ?? Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle ?? A constructi­on site at the 40acre Stonestown Galleria in San Francisco.
Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle A constructi­on site at the 40acre Stonestown Galleria in San Francisco.

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