Los Angeles Times

Palisades center books Amazon

Store will be among changes in $200-million redo

- By Roger Vincent

Just a few years ago it was said that Pacific Palisades’ tiny commercial center had the beaten-down aura of a Midwestern Main Street where the momand-pop shops have been driven out by Walmart — only there was no Walmart.

“It was a little village with one or two streets of stores and restaurant­s,” said actor Billy Crystal, who moved there with his family in 1979. “Over the years it sort of faded and faded.”

The impression that the Palisades had been somehow left behind was always misleading, because it is home to some of the highest-priced residences in Southern California. Now, the tony Westside community is getting not only a new town center from shopping center mogul Rick Caruso — but also online retailer Amazon’s second Los Angeles bricksand-mortar bookstore.

Caruso envisions the $200-million redevelopm­ent known as Palisades Village as more of a walkable Main Street than a ritzy shopping center like his Grove or Americana at Brand developmen­ts. The 125,000-square-foot complex on Swarthmore Avenue bordering Sunset Boulevard will include a movie theater, community space, grocer and retail shops. There will also be eight apartment units.

It’s a rare case of a

developer remaking a hamlet’s main drag after it fell on hard times, which is a little hard to fathom given how seaside Pacific Palisades is one of the most prosperous neighborho­ods in Los Angeles, with a healthy dose of celebritie­s and a median income over $150,000.

Among the casualties over the years was Village Books, which the community fought in vain to save. Resident Tom Hanks was among the fundraiser­s, autographi­ng books and CDs in the rain for three hours in December 2013.

“The Village bookstore was so loved by the community,” said Crystal, who acts as honorary mayor along with his wife, Janice. “You could bring your child or go in for readings by authors who came by. They just couldn’t compete anymore.”

Of course, one of the big reasons small bookstores have struggled for survival is because it’s hard to compete with Amazon, but the Seattle giant stands to open shop in the Palisades as a welcomed neighbor.

The only other Amazon Books in Los Angeles is in the Westfield Century City shopping center.

Amazon bookstores are typically far smaller than those of big chains such as Barnes & Noble, but offer selections based on perceived tastes in the area, customer ratings and popularity. Books are placed face-out on the shelves “so each can communicat­e its own essence,” according to an Amazon statement.

A representa­tive of Amazon Books, which is set to open with the rest of Palisades Village on Sept. 22, said the store would fit into the neighborho­od.

“We created Amazon Books to be a place where customers discover books and devices they’ll love,” said Cameron Janes, vice president of Amazon Books, who said company data show that Pacific Palisades is “in an area that we know is full of readers.”

Crystal said he hopes Amazon will interact with the community and schools. “I want to see more kids read instead of text and Instagram,” he said.

Caruso, founder and chief executive of the company that bears his name, purchased the property in 2014 and received approval for the project two years later.

With the addition of Amazon, Palisades Village is 80% leased, the developer said. The store is to open on Swarthmore Avenue.

Another long-gone community landmark, the Bay Theater, will be resurrecte­d as an outpost of Cenepolis Luxury Cinemas, which operates upscale theaters in which viewers sit in reclining leather chairs and can have food and cocktails delivered by waiters during the show.

There will be seven restaurant­s with bars in the Village, including in the theater, a noteworthy increase in potential libation from the old days when Pacific Palisades had only one place to get a drink.

The developer said his goal is to create a range of options for people to dine at different price points and hang out in a quaint commercial district with the flavor of an old resort town.

He started choosing tenants after holding public meetings to see what the neighbors wanted. “Localism is a huge trend in retail right now,” he said. “People want something close to home that serves them.”

Along with a bookstore and theater, locals unsurprisi­ngly wanted ice cream, coffee, a bakery, beauty shop and groceries, all of which are coming.

The Village will be far smaller than Caruso’s major shopping centers including the Grove in Los Angeles and Americana at Brand in Glendale, but it will have about the same number of stores at 40 to 50.

“The difference is the scale is much, much smaller,” he said. The Grove is about 18 acres and Palisades is about 3 acres.

Like Caruso’s other retail centers, Palisades Village will have parking (in this case undergroun­d) and outdoor spaces for leisure.

The comeback of the commercial heart would elevate the Palisades, said resident Drew Planting, a real estate developer who is not involved in Caruso’s project.

“If you look around Los Angeles, the successful neighborho­ods and communitie­s are the ones with a town center,” he said, such as Larchmont Village, Old Pasadena and Abbot Kinney Boulevard.

“As the city gets more difficult to navigate from a traffic perspectiv­e, those neighborho­ods get ever more valuable,” said Planting, cofounder of GPI Cos. “You’re not going to drive from Pasadena to Venice to eat dinner.”

The risk for Caruso and his tenants is that they will be heavily dependent on locals because Pacific Palisades is comparativ­ely remote and previous businesses failed in part because they didn’t have enough customers, Planting said.

“The challenge is that the Palisades is not the most densely populated spot in Los Angeles,” he said. “It’s going to be incumbent on the community to support the center. You’ve got to use it.”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? THE PROJECT, known as Palisades Village, is envisioned as more of a walkable Main Street than a ritzy shopping center similar to the Grove. Above, executive Michael Gazzano at the site in Pacific Palisades.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times THE PROJECT, known as Palisades Village, is envisioned as more of a walkable Main Street than a ritzy shopping center similar to the Grove. Above, executive Michael Gazzano at the site in Pacific Palisades.
 ?? Spencer Platt Getty Images ?? AMAZON Books will arrive years after the community lost its Village Books. Above, a store in New York.
Spencer Platt Getty Images AMAZON Books will arrive years after the community lost its Village Books. Above, a store in New York.
 ?? Caruso ?? THE 125,000-square-foot complex on Swarthmore Avenue bordering Sunset Boulevard will include an Amazon Books, movie theater, community space, grocer and retail shops. Above, a rendering of the redevelopm­ent.
Caruso THE 125,000-square-foot complex on Swarthmore Avenue bordering Sunset Boulevard will include an Amazon Books, movie theater, community space, grocer and retail shops. Above, a rendering of the redevelopm­ent.
 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? DEVELOPER Rick Caruso said Palisades Village is 80% leased. The center will be heavily dependent on residents of the aff luent but small neighborho­od.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times DEVELOPER Rick Caruso said Palisades Village is 80% leased. The center will be heavily dependent on residents of the aff luent but small neighborho­od.

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