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The Mall at the Source (also known as The Source Mall or simply The Source) is a shopping mall located in Westbury, New York, USA, on Old Country Road and Merchants Concourse (Ellison Avenue), currently managed by Newmark Grubb Knight Frank and owned by lenders. Until August 2012, the mall was managed and co-owned by Simon Property Group. It had many stores including Old Navy and currently has an H&M. It also has several upscale restaurants such as The Cheesecake Factory and P. F. Chang's China Bistro. The mall was named for its former anchor store Fortunoff (which used the phrase "The Source" in advertising for the chain), which the mall was built around and which closed in June 2009. With the closure of Fortunoff, Steve and Barry's (which closed in early 2009), and Circuit City (which closed in March 2009), three large anchor stores have become vacant. The drop of foot traffic by the loss of the anchors has caused other stores, such as Forever 21, Starbucks, Ayhan's Shish Kebab, Ranch 1 , and others, to pull out from the mall. Simon Property Group and unnamed co-owners of the Mall at the Source defaulted on a $124 million balloon interest-only mortgage in March 2009.〔()〕 It was purchased by a European pension fund in August 2012 and auctioned.〔http://libn.com/2012/08/09/mall-at-the-source-in-westbury-to-be-auctioned/〕 ==History== The site of The Mall at the Source was originally Roosevelt Field airport, with Charles Lindbergh taking off on his epic trans-Atlantic flight near the site of the mall's parking garage. Roosevelt Raceway bought the property when it expanded the harness-racing track in the 1940s for additional parking. In the early 1960s, Ohrbach's constructed a department store on leased land at north-east corner of the raceway's property. Fortunoff built its store several years later in 1964, as they followed their customers east from the original Fortunoff location in Brooklyn. Alan Fortunoff bought the entire property north of the current boundary of Transverse Drive from Roosevelt Raceway in the early 1980s. In the late 1980s, Alan Fortunoff planned to construct the Long Island Galleria shopping mall, one comparable to the size of the massive Roosevelt Field Mall a few miles away but with different stores. It was to be built by the Westfield Group and include Neiman Marcus and Nordstrom. Community pressure over congestion concerns forced Fortunoff to scale back the size and scope of the mall. Roughly half of the property was sold to Price Club (now Costco), which developed their portion to include a Kmart (now Walmart). The mall was instead built by Simon Property Group, and they continued to manage and co-own the mall until August 2012. The mall was also the first on Long Island to house clothing chains H&M, Old Navy, Nordstrom Rack Cosmetics Plus, and Saks Off 5th. It was also the first to house restaurants including The Cheesecake Factory, P.F. Chang's China Bistro, and Rainforest Cafe (closed on 19 October 2000).〔http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-28309459_ITM〕 The Mall at The Source is also adjacent to many other shopping complexes and restaurants.〔()〕 On August 9, 2012, it was announced that the property was to go up for auction by the end of the month. As of that date, the mall was under 50% occupancy. With the opening of the nearby Gallery at Westbury Plaza in late 2012 prompting Nordstrom Rack, Old Navy, and Off 5th to move away, the future of the mall is left in a state of uncertainty.〔http://libn.com/2012/08/09/mall-at-the-source-in-westbury-to-be-auctioned/〕 On August 28, an auction was held, but no one bought the mall.〔http://www.newsday.com/business/inside-long-island-business-1.811933/mall-at-the-source-fails-to-find-buyers-at-auction-1.3932608〕 Lenders then took ownership of the mall, and Newmark Grubb Knight Frank was hired for management.〔http://www.nasdaq.com/article/nordstrom-aug-same-store-sales-climb-21---quick-facts-20120830-00412〕 In 2013, a Lord & Taylor outlet store and the Jewelry Emporium and Mall opened in the former Nordstrom Rack and Off 5th, respectively. However, these stores have not done much to increase foot traffic at the mall, and the vacancy rate has continued to increase. In 2014, Dick's Sporting Goods closed a substantial portion of its Golf Galaxy stores,〔http://www.golfwrx.com/239847/dicks-sporting-goods-may-close-many-of-its-golf-galaxy-stores/〕 and its store in the Mall at the Source was one of them. David's Bridal moved to the nearby Roosevelt Raceway Shopping Center in June 2015, leaving the Fortunoff court almost completely vacant. Due to its low foot traffic and high vacancy rate, The Mall at the Source is largely considered to be a dead mall.〔http://www.deadmalls.com/malls/mall_at_the_source.html〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mall at The Source」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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