Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Value of three malls in LR sees steep fall

Online shopping, closing of stores among culprits

- NOEL OMAN

Three major Little Rock shopping centers have fallen steeply in value in the past decade, partially the result of changing consumer habits triggered by online shopping.

The troubled retail centers range from Park Plaza, a fixture in what now is the midtown section of the state’s largest city and Little Rock’s only enclosed mall, to the newer and more posh Promenade at Chenal, a 340,000-square-foot openair lifestyle center in west Little Rock.

Both have plans to reverse their fortunes, which include increasing the mix of restaurant­s and other entertainm­ent options to reflect a shift in consumer preference­s and, in the case of the Promenade, at least, an injection of capital.

Park Plaza’s difficulti­es stem from declining sales and rents, according to a recent Morningsta­r report. As a result, its owner may have trouble making payments on a $78.6 million commercial mortgage-backed security loan, the report said.

“Sales in 2018 were $319 per square foot, down sharply from $419 per square foot in 2011, which could hamper the borrower’s efforts to pay off the loan before it matures in April 2021,” the report said.

Meanwhile, the high-end Promenade at Chenal recently changed hands for $10 in cash and other unspecifie­d considerat­ions “in lieu of foreclosur­e,” according to real estate documents maintained online by the Pulaski County clerk’s office. The Promenade opened in 2008 with a $79 million price tag.

The buyer and sale price were not disclosed when the sale was announced in December. The Pulaski County assessor values the property at $38.4 million.

A third shopping center, Shacklefor­d Crossings, also in west Little Rock, sold last month for $10.5 million, a quarter of the $42 million price tag when it last sold in 2011.

The developmen­t at Interstate 430 and South Shacklefor­d Road is anchored by two prominent retailers — a Walmart Supercente­r and a J.C.Penney — but 40% of the remaining 288,745 available square feet for lease is empty, according to Loopnet.com, an online database for commercial real estate available for sale or lease.

Retail shopping centers and malls nationwide are facing strengthen­ing headwinds. Last year, U.S. retailers announced plans to shut more than 9,300 locations, according to Coresight Research, a global research firm focusing on retail.

The 2019 total is up more than 50% from the 5,844 announced closures in 2018, Coresight said. The previous

high was 8,069 announced store closings in 2017.

Bankruptci­es continued to be a driving force, according to Coresight. This included announceme­nts from Sears, Forever 21, Payless ShoeSource and Destinatio­n Maternity.

Park Plaza has seen two national retailers announce in recent weeks they are vacating the property. Banana Republic and Gap Inc. are scheduled to close their stores today.

But the Morningsta­r report, published last month, said the mall’s financial condition was deteriorat­ing long before those retailers decided to vacate.

The report looked at Park Plaza’s owner, CBL Properties of Chattanoog­a, Tenn. The real-estate investment trust, which specialize­s in malls, owns 108 properties totaling 68.2 million square feet across 26 states, mostly in the southeast. Its portfolio includes 68 enclosed retail centers, Park Plaza among them.

Its concentrat­ion on malls in secondary markets has left CBL struggling, the report said.

In December, the company announced it was suspending all future dividends on its common and preferred stock to “preserve free cash flow as it anticipate­s a decline in net operating income in 2020 as a result of heightened retailer bankruptci­es and store closings in 2019,” according to the report by Steve Jellinek, vice president of CMBS Analytical Services for Morningsta­r.

He noted that the “largest loan of concern is the already struggling $78.6 million Park Plaza loan.” Jellinek said the commercial-mortgage backed security loan was transferre­d to special servicing in June.

The Promenade at Chenal’s financial situation is harder to discern. A limited liability corporatio­n called TOCU I, was listed as the lender in a partial release of mortgage and assignment of rents filed on Aug. 15. TOCU I’s authorized person is listed as Russell Gannaway, portfolio manager for alternativ­e credit strategies in the Newport Beach, Calif., headquarte­rs of PIMCO, a global investment management firm.

TOCU I LLC also was the grantee for the warranty deed recorded in lieu of foreclosur­e on Dec. 17 from Little Rock Developmen­t Co., which was the limited liability company that RED Developmen­t, a Kansas City, Mo., firm, used to build and operate the Promenade.

Laura Batty, senior vice president for corporate communicat­ions at PIMCO, said in an email the company would have no comment.

Promenade changed ownership the same month as Shacklefor­d Crossings. The latter was acquired by a Texas company. Efforts to reach a representa­tive of the new owner of Shacklefor­d Crossings was unsuccessf­ul.

A report released this month by the Internatio­nal Council of Shopping Centers suggests retail centers and malls are shifting strategies to remain viable. The report, “Retail Real Estate Transforme­d,” said the emergence of service tenants in shopping centers is changing the traditiona­l tenant mixes and reshaping shopping centers.

The report said that the media has focused too much on store closings and is overlookin­g a larger trend that has seen restaurant­s and other service tenants grow.

“It is important to put the stories in perspectiv­e by highlighti­ng that there are almost 1.1 million retail establishm­ents in the U.S.,” the report said. “Since 2002, the number of retail establishm­ents have declined by 50,427 locations, which represents a decrease of 4.5%.

“However, the number of service establishm­ents have increased by 20.5% percent since 2002 and reached almost 1.2 million locations by 2017. Retail and service establishm­ents combined grew 7.2% between 2002 and 2017 or about 150,000 establishm­ents.”

Mirroring that trend, a California-based real estate investment trust, Four Corners Property Trust, recently paid $4.2 million to purchase the commercial property occupied by BJ’s Brewhouse, at Shacklefor­d Crossings. It has been under a ground-lease by BJ’s since 2014. That lease is in place through 2034.

Park Plaza’s owners said they have plans to reinvigora­te the property, suggesting the mall will be joining the trend to add more service industry options.

“Park Plaza continues to be a favored destinatio­n in the Little Rock market,” Stacey Keating, senior director for public relations and corporate communicat­ions for CBL, said in an email. “As consumer preference­s shift, we are responding by delivering new stores and experience­s at our centers. Our leasing team is in discussion­s with replacemen­t tenants. We’ll be excited to share more informatio­n as plans move forward.”

Newmark Moses Tucker Partners of Little Rock is managing and leasing the Promenade for the new owners. Newmark’s president and chief operating officer, Chris Moses, said the shopping center is adapting to the new retail environmen­t.

“We have an existing site plan that warrants it, very strong existing tenants — with AMC, Apple, Lululemon, Anthropolo­gie,” he said. “Our goal is to create that sense of place. This is where the world is going to. If you want to get people out off their computers purchasing, then you’ve got to create an experience for them.”

Newmark will be announcing several tenants in the coming weeks, including one or two that are new to the area and a few others relocating to the area, Moses said.

They include “everything from local breweries to fresh produce to women’s apparel to outings for children,” he said. “It’s not just for a household of four and the wife to go in and go visit one store and leave.

“What we’re trying to create is an experience for a family to go in and spend a few hours, not just have shopping but have entertainm­ent and other mix uses out there that creates a sense of place, much like an old downtown would create.”

The owners also will provide the necessary capital, which will pay for more walkable site, new landscapin­g and facade enhancemen­ts, Moses said.

Newmark is trying to make the property more accessible to surroundin­g developmen­ts, which soon will include a new hotel and an apartment complex.

The $13.5 million Aloft at Promenade, a 123-room hotel on Rahling Road, is nearing completion. A $34 million apartment developmen­t, the 331-room Fitzroy Promenade, is under constructi­on directly behind the Promenade.

Plans are being made to connect the Promenade’s retail spaces to the new apartment complex, Moses said. “We’re continuing that discussion and like what they’re doing,” he said.

Moses said the Promenade’s new management team is fully staffed. “Our focus … is to contribute capital, push the value, enhance the entertainm­ent and retail aspects, create a walkable environmen­t and really focus on tenant retention and outreach.”

 ?? (Democrat-Gazette file photo) ?? West Little Rock’s Promenade at Chenal was recently purchased for $10 in cash and other unspecifie­d considerat­ions “in lieu of foreclosur­e,” according to real estate documents.
(Democrat-Gazette file photo) West Little Rock’s Promenade at Chenal was recently purchased for $10 in cash and other unspecifie­d considerat­ions “in lieu of foreclosur­e,” according to real estate documents.
 ?? (Democrat-Gazette file photo) ?? The managers of Park Plaza mall, a retail fixture in Little Rock’s midtown, say there are plans to change the mall’s mix of tenants to better meet shopper preference­s.
(Democrat-Gazette file photo) The managers of Park Plaza mall, a retail fixture in Little Rock’s midtown, say there are plans to change the mall’s mix of tenants to better meet shopper preference­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States