Prior to the mid-1950s, Downriver residents had fewer choices when it came to quality shopping. The mom-and-pop stores were the dominant force Downriver up to that time. For that special gift or necessity, residents would have to travel north to downtown Detroit to take part in the happenings offered by Hudson's, Kern's, Kresge and others.
Lincoln Park would end up being the pioneer city that would usher in the modern shopping age to our area, and it was an age that showed tremendous growth over a short period of time. Every want or need was now practically at our fingertips, often at a tremendous cost savings (especially when it came to travel and gas).
This new era did come with a cost: many of the local family-oriented businesses have passed into history. Even the stores that comprised much of our shopping pleasure in the 1960s have passed on, in favor of big-box retail which is so commonplace today.
Lincoln Park would end up being the pioneer city that would usher in the modern shopping age to our area, and it was an age that showed tremendous growth over a short period of time. Every want or need was now practically at our fingertips, often at a tremendous cost savings (especially when it came to travel and gas).
This new era did come with a cost: many of the local family-oriented businesses have passed into history. Even the stores that comprised much of our shopping pleasure in the 1960s have passed on, in favor of big-box retail which is so commonplace today.
With age comes changes in shopping habits and tastes, but we'll never forget the stores that came before them. Here is a look at some of our more important shopping plazas through the years. If you know of any others that may be included on this list, please forward them via our Contact page.
LINCOLN PARK PLAZA (1955): Fort Street & Emmons
ORIGINAL ANCHOR TENANTS:
J.C. Penney, Kresge, People's Outfitters
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The first major shopping center south of Detroit, ground was broken for this site in 1954, with opening a year later.
An original co-anchor tenant at this store was People's Outfitters, which did not last long, but not due to lack of foot traffic. Detroit-based J.L. Hudson replaced People's by 1959 and would head the mall for the next 11 years, boasting three levels of merchandise (including a full basement). Hudson's closed this location in 1970, moving to the new Southland Mall in Taylor. The location became best known as Farmer Jack from the early 1970s until the early 2000s (although the basement & second floor were off limits for the remainder of its lifetime). As of 2018, the mall has since been purchased by an outside firm and has begun preliminary restoration efforts. However, the firm has differed in their efforts when compared with what the city requires to bring structures up to code. Only 20% occupied, it is currently anchored by Great Lakes ACE Hardware and Dollar Tree. |
SEARS SHOPPING PLAZA (1956): Dix-Toledo and Southfield Road
ORIGINAL ANCHOR TENANTS:
Kroger, Sears Roebuck & Co.
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The city of Lincoln Park would claim home-field rule on developing shopping malls barely a year after the brick and mortar dried at Lincoln Park Plaza. Sears, Roebuck and Co. opened here in 1956 (its smaller Wyandotte location continued on until 1976), and the official grand opening of this center occurred the following year. Per sources, this was likely a land trade deal for the city, as the approximate cost paid for by Sears was $450,000 to the city, which would use the proceeds to construct their police station.
This center pioneered the "sidewalk sale" Downriver by their "Crazy Days" sale initiative, whose initial offering in 1958 was ushered in with radio coverage and parade, including an elephant strolling down Dix-Toledo Road. In its heyday, the mall housed 35 stores in addition to the Sears location, which was cited in the 1960s as the biggest-grossing Sears store in the world. The mall continued to do well until the mid-1990s, when specialty stores began to leave; topped with the completion of "The Hill" in Allen Park, where the majority of remaining stores would move in the early 2000s. Talk then centered around the construction of a possible WalMart store, which Sears would fight in court and win. The center's last tenant, Dollar Tree, would move across Southfield Road in 2017. Demolition of the mall portion occured in spring of 2018; later that year, Sears announced the Lincoln Park store would be closed by the start of 2019 as part of the troubled chain's latest round of closures.
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SOUTHGATE SHOPPING CENTER (1958): Eureka and Trenton Roads
ORIGINAL ANCHOR TENANTS:
Federal, Kresge, Montgomery Ward, Woolworth
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As early as 1952, the Realty Mortgage and Investment Corporation of Detroit announced that a multi-million dollar Southgate Center would be built at Eureka and Trenton Roads. Constructed by Charles N. Agree in its now-familiar L-shape, it had its grand celebratory opening on October 16, 1957, which featured a German Polka Band, plus a radio remote hosted by noted radio DJ Robin Seymour (the man who would later put "Swingin' Time" on the local television map.
Wrigley's supermarket was the first tenant, opening for business in September, 1957. Federal's department store opened the following month in a separate 80,000 sq ft (7,400 m2) building next to the center. Montgomery Ward was the last store to be built, opened in 1958 and quickly becoming the center anchor for over a generation. At its height, it would hold 35 stores in the mid-1960s. Changes in retailing (moving away from specialty stores) caused the center to fall on harder times in the 1990s; with Montgomery Ward closing in 2000 and Service Merchandise a couple years later. With the demolition of the Wards building in 2012, that parcel was remade into Market City Park, an amphitheater which opened its first full season in 2016. Shopping center ownership expressed hopes this would help in rejuvenating the complex. |
SOUTHLAND MALL (1968): Eureka and Pardee Roads, Taylor
ORIGINAL ANCHOR TENANTS:
J.L. Hudson, Kroger, Woolworth
J.L. Hudson, Kroger, Woolworth
Albert's
Artiste Beauty Salon Athlete's Foot Baker Shoes Big Boy Restaurant Dr. Borsand Brenda K Studio Candy World Chess King Circus World (Toys) Corey's Jewel Box Detroit Bank & Trust Elliott Travel Service Fanny Farmer Candy Flagg Brothers |
Foxmoor
Franklin Simon L.G. Haig (Shoes) Hamby's Barber Shop Hartman's Homemaker Shops Hot Sam's Pretzels Hugh Jarvis Gifts Hughes & Hatcher Jo-Ann Fabrics Kinney Shoes Lady Orva Hosiery Land of Hi-Fi Lane Bryant Marianne |
Meyer Treasure Chest
Phillip's Shoes Plum Tree Shops Petal Pusher Ray's Prime Meats Richman Jewelers Sallan Jewelers Sanders Schiller Millinery Singer Sewing Sonny's Hair Southland Coney Isl. Southland Theater Suzy's Hat Shop Tell Time Shop |
Thom McAn
Tie Rak United Shirt U.S. Post Office Van Horn's Winkleman's Wurlitzer (music) |
Southland Center was designed by Victor Gruen Associates and Louis G. Redstone Associates. Five years in the making and 22 months worth of construction later, it opened in 1970 anchored by a three-level; 272,000-square-foot Hudson's, along with Kroger and Woolworth. Its first major addition occurred just weeks after its opening: the two-screen Southland 1-2 Theater. Kroger would vacate by 1975, upon demolition, JCPenney and the eastern store court was constructed in its place. Southland in the 1970s was perhaps as well known for its fountains, bird cage, fish tank and other decorative displays near center court. These were removed by 1981 when the mall underwent its first renovation. Another addition was to the west side, with the debut of Mervyn's in 1988. The best-known addition was likely "Picnic In The Garden," a food court that would pre-date Fairlane Town Center's by several years.
Under new ownership, Southland underwent a major renovation in 2015 which included the construction of an adjacent Cinemark movie theater.
Under new ownership, Southland underwent a major renovation in 2015 which included the construction of an adjacent Cinemark movie theater.
SOUTHTOWNE CROSSING PLAZA (1985): Dix-Toledo and Eureka Road
ORIGINAL ANCHOR TENANTS:
Builder's Square, Children's Palace, Herman's World of Sporting Goods A.L. Price
Bo-Rics Dollar Castle Famous Footwear Fashion Bug Gold Nugget Jewelry Kidsmart Kliza Hallmark LaPrima Music Wear Abouts Builder's Square, which was a subsidiary of K-Mart, would begin to lose market share due to further market saturation (Home Quarters and Home Depot) and, with K-Mart spinning off its outside investments, this location would become Southgate's second HQ location at one time.
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One of the biggest losses Downriver Communities felt was the closure (in 1984) and demolition (in 1985) of the fabled Michigan Drive-In. This prime plot of land did not stay vacant for long, as the first major plaza to build in Southgate in over twenty years produced Southtowne Crossing.
Two of its anchor stores provided the first local wave of competition in home improvement and toy retailing. Children's Palace was just getting into the Michigan market, and would attempt to unseat Toys R Us as the predominant children's toy retailer in the area. On the opposite end of the plaza stood Builder's Square, the first major competitor to long-time Southgate (and Taylor) mainstay Forest City, in operation since 1971. The mall would do extremely well for its first few years. Within four years of its opening, Children's Palace would lose the battle with Toys R Us, but was quickly replaced by the area's first Best Buy electronics store, itself in direct competition with ABC Warehouse and Radio Shack. |
Its closure in the early 2000s would hasten the plaza's eventual demise. With Best Buy relocating to Southland later in the decade, the strip was left with little more than Bo-Rics, Dollar General and Lew Silver Diamond Broker. These businesses would quickly vanish ahead of this mall's demolition after only 20 years in existence, now replaced by Wal-Mart.
TAYLORTOWN CENTER (1960): Ecorse and Pardee Road
Construction of this mall was likely completed in stages, as the Ecorse & Pardee mall boasted an A & P as early as the late 1950s.
Originally named "Green Center" according to a 1962 document, the site became known as Taylortown, perhaps owing to its vast size, as well as homage to Taylor Township, which had not yet been organized as a city. It would reign supreme as Taylor Township's flagshop mall, through the Township's incorporation as a city in 1968, until Southland Mall's construction in 1970.
Having fallen on harder times in the mid-1990s, the mall has enjoyed a resurgence of sorts since the mid-2000s, currently anchored by what is now Downriver's largest trade center, named after the mall itself.
Originally named "Green Center" according to a 1962 document, the site became known as Taylortown, perhaps owing to its vast size, as well as homage to Taylor Township, which had not yet been organized as a city. It would reign supreme as Taylor Township's flagshop mall, through the Township's incorporation as a city in 1968, until Southland Mall's construction in 1970.
Having fallen on harder times in the mid-1990s, the mall has enjoyed a resurgence of sorts since the mid-2000s, currently anchored by what is now Downriver's largest trade center, named after the mall itself.
ORIGINAL ANCHOR TENANTS:
Federal, W.T. Grant, Woolworth
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THE PLAZA (unknown construction date): Eureka and Interstate 75
ORIGINAL ANCHOR TENANTS:
Beckwith Evans, Fandango Hall, Wayne County
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With the recent demolitions of major shopping plazas such as the Shopper's Fair building at Fort & Pennsylvania, the Yankee plaza at Fort & King, and even small plazas such as the one on Sibley Road near Emit in Brownstown (which never saw a tenant), perhaps the most well-known complex in recent times was simply called "The Plaza" at Eureka and I-75, just east of the former Gibraltar Trade Center.
Two entire generations of residents may not have realized that this plaza, at one time, had been bustling between the completion of I-75 in 1967, and the openings of Southland (1970) and Meijer Thrifty Acres (1977). The last tenants, Concentra Urgent Care and Loyalty Sounds (music supply), departed in 2013. In preparation for the future construction of a Menard's Home Improvement superstore on the former Gibraltar Trade Center property, this plaza would be leveled at the end of 2015. |