St. Charles Mall Explained

St. Charles Mall
Image Alt:The main entrance of the St. Charles Mall. (Taken after 1987)
Location:St. Charles, Illinois, United States
Address:Rt. 38 & Randall Rd
Developer:Schostak Corporation
Manager:St. Charles Mall Associates, Ltd.
Owner:St. Charles Mall Associates, Ltd.
Number Of Stores:0 (48 stores originally)
Number Of Anchors:0 (2 anchors originally)
Floors:1
Parking:Less than 100

St. Charles Mall was a shopping mall located in St. Charles, IL. The mall opened in 1980 with over 48 stores (including 2 anchors stores). The mall closed in 1995. The anchors stores were Kmart and Joseph Spiess Company.[1]

History

The mall started construction in the late 1970s and finished construction in 1980; the mall opened the same year. The interior had foliage, seating, and colorful decor throughout the mall. The mall opened with almost 48 stores. Joseph Spiess Company was the first anchor to open before the mall opened in 1979. Kmart opened the following year. The 3-screen Essaness Theatre opened in December 1980 and would later be sold to Cineplex Odeon in 1986. The more notable stores were RadioShack, DEB, General Nutrition Center, Kinney Shoes, Camelot Music, Payless Shoe Source, and B. Dalton Booksellers.[2]

Decline

The mall continued to thrive until 1991 when Charlestowne Mall opened nearby attracting shoppers away from the St. Charles Mall.[3] Charlestowne Mall offered something to customers that St. Charles Mall didn't have and that is 2 floors of shopping area and over 100 stores. On the final day of the mall staying open only 1 tenant remained and 2 anchor stores. Joseph Spiess Company closed in 1995 due to bankruptcy of the company before the mall closed.[4] [5] Kmart closed the same year due to an unknown reason. The St. Charles Mall closed in 1995 due to vacancy. The Cineplex Odeon theater was the last part of the mall to close in 2002.[6]

Demolition

In early 2002, the City of St. Charles decided to demolish all the mall buildings including some outparcels for redevelopment opportunities.[7] The demolition took about a month and a half to complete. Jewel Osco was the only outparcel to be spared from demolition.

Redevelopment

The former St. Charles Mall site had a fair share of redevelopment plans over the years. The first redevelopment plan for the St. Charles Mall was in 2002 when the City of St. Charles approved plans for an auto mall. Those plans never made it into full consideration and was later dissolved. Fast forward to 2017 when the City of St. Charles approved plans for a new residential development called "Prairie Centre."[8] Construction started on the site in 2018.[9] Over 8 residential buildings with 670 units were built in the span of a couple years. The site is still under development to add other buildings.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: St. Charles Mall: St. Charles, Illinois on DeadMalls.com . 2023-11-12 . DeadMalls.com.
  2. News: 1987-11-18 . ST. Charles Mall Map . 36 . The Daily Chronicle . 2023-11-12.
  3. Web site: 1991-08-15 . ST. CHARLES NO LONGER SEES MALL AS SCOURGE . 2023-11-12 . Chicago Tribune.
  4. News: Murphy . H. Lee . December 2, 1995 . REAL ESTATE; MINI-MALLS' MIGHTY TASK; RETAIL RELICS MUST RETROFIT FOR THE '90S. . Crain's Chicago Business . November 12, 2023.
  5. Web site: 1996-02-06 . SPIESS CLOSING: A RETAIL OF WOE . 2023-11-13 . Chicago Tribune.
  6. Web site: Saint Charles Theaters in St. Charles, IL - Cinema Treasures . 2023-11-12 . cinematreasures.org.
  7. Web site: 2002-03-31 . Auto mall plan OKd by council . 2023-11-12 . Chicago Tribune.
  8. Web site: Prairie Centre . 2023-11-12 . City of St. Charles, Illinois . en.
  9. Web site: 2018-09-19 . Construction of apartment buildings underway at Prairie Centre in St. Charles . 2023-11-12 . Daily Herald . en-US.