News: Retail

WP Realty and Angelo, Gordon & Co. sell Fairlawn Town Centre

WP Realty and Angelo, Gordon & Co. have sold Fairlawn Town Centre. Fairlawn is positioned in Summit County, just west of Akron and 35 minutes from downtown Cleveland. The University of Akron, with an enrollment of 25,000 students, is located less than five miles from the property. Fairlawn Town Centre is a 447,037 s/f community shopping center comprised of five buildings including one restaurant pad and is anchored by several national and regional retailers including Giant Eagle, Target (separately owned), Home Goods, Pet Supplies Plus, Ashley Furniture and Marc's. In-line retail tenants include a mix of national, regional, and local tenants including U.S. Post Office, Chuck E. Cheese, Panera Bread, GNC, Subway, and Radio Shack. WP Realty purchased Fairlawn in May 2010. The acquisition of the center included a vacant 39,840 s/f junior anchor box formerly occupied by Circuit City. Fairlawn Town Centre provided an opportunity to acquire a stable grocery-anchored shopping center with considerable immediate upside through the lease-up of the vacant anchor and inline space. WP Realty utilized its strong relationships and expertise in leasing, development and management to solidify all tenancies and lease a majority of the 57,000 s/f of vacant space including 27,587 s/f to Ashley Furniture, the relocation and expansion of Pet Supplies Plus, and the relocation and expansion of Lucky Shoes to enable a 17,000 s/f expansion of Giant Eagle.
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Village centers and local retail: What the market wants - by Carol Todreas

Village centers and local retail: What the market wants - by Carol Todreas

Good news! Brick and mortar is alive and well. Many malls are coming back. Americans are flocking to Europe to walk, shop, eat, and enjoy much needed vacations. Visitors return and talk about the pleasures of walking and shopping in local shops in cities and towns all over Europe.
Placemaking and retail in 2024 - by Carol Todreas

Placemaking and retail in 2024 - by Carol Todreas

Placemaking. That is the word for 2024. While the concept has historical precedence in urban development, it became part of our current culture in the 1960’s when urbanists started to think about cities for people, not just cars.

Reimagining retail for the downtown - by Carol Todreas

Reimagining retail for the downtown - by Carol Todreas

Before COVID-19, downtown retail had been sliding downwards. A few restaurants and stores were hanging on, but the trajectory was headed south. Now with post- COVID-19 lifestyle changes, old-style retail anywhere has lost its market appeal.
Keeping the “there” there - by Carol Todreas

Keeping the “there” there - by Carol Todreas

New zoning is a big topic for many communities. Whether it is to comply with the 2021 MBTA legislation calling for more multi-family housing in locales with access to T stations or to address other pressures from public-private entities, zoning for multi-family housing is believed to be a major part of the solution to the housing crisis.