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New Jersey’s American Dream Mall Readies for Its Ultimate Test

New Jersey’s American Dream Mall Readies for Its Ultimate Test

(Bloomberg) -- Two decades in the making, the American Dream mega-mall is about to open its doors to shoppers. The question is how many will show up.

The $5 billion complex next to MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, will roll out its retail portion in March, after cutting the ribbon on its amusement park, indoor ski slope and ice rink last year. Much is riding on the retail behemoth. It’s employing some 17,000 to staff its 450 stores, restaurants and services in the space of about 3 million square feet (almost 280,000 square meters) -- equivalent to about 50 football fields.

New Jersey’s American Dream Mall Readies for Its Ultimate Test

But American Dream’s stores are opening during what may be the industry’s darkest nightmare. Retailers from apparel chains to department stores have succumbed to bankruptcy as consumers migrate online, sapping malls of their lifeblood. Fewer than half of U.S. malls are expected to survive the onslaught. Add to that the lengthy and troubled development process preceding American Dream’s opening, and not everyone is convinced.

Macy’s Inc. Chief Executive Officer Jeff Gennette, for example, said his company “certainly did consider it,” but the department-store chain held off, given the property is “unproven.”

“We gotta figure out if that’s a viable property,” he said in an interview.

It also faces plenty of nearby competition: The mall in Short Hills, about 30 minutes away in Millburn, New Jersey, is an established luxury shopping mecca. The Westfield Garden State Plaza in Paramus is even closer.

On Track

Still, American Dream looks on track for its March retail opening. As of January, developers had leased almost 90% of available space at the white-walled construction of skylights and giant windows. When including leases under negotiation, that rises to almost 100%.

Companies like Japanese fashion brand Uniqlo and retail chain Primark have stores lined up, and Gap Inc.’s Old Navy and Banana Republic are opening. Victoria’s Secret, collegiate-lifestyle label Pink and Bath & Body Works, all owned by L Brands Inc., will have locations as will Kate Hudson’s athleisure line Fabletics. Even a recent victim of the retail apocalypse will be present: Charlotte Russe Inc. which filed for bankruptcy about a year ago.

There were times when it seemed hard to imagine that American Dream would ever open. The mall’s development started in 1996 and was marred by setbacks all along the way. Developers pulled out and a roof partially collapsed. There were funding shortfalls and issues with contaminated soils. Then, one of its prospective high-end and anchor tenants, Barneys New York Inc. filed for bankruptcy last year, nixing that plan.

Milestone Reached

Due to the long and tortured process, the opening of the Nickelodeon Universe amusement park, ski slope and ice rink last year was something of a milestone. The attractions are part of Canadian owner Triple Five Group’s strategy to defeat the retail curse -- it’s banking that the allure of roller coasters, skiing and swimming will drive traffic.

It’s a play used by other mall operators such as Simon Property Group Inc., which just agreed to buy rival U.S. shopping-mall operator Taubman Centers Inc. Consolidation is another strategy for malls to survive.

New Jersey’s American Dream Mall Readies for Its Ultimate Test

Dicey Outlook

The outlook for 2020 remains dicey. More than 7,600 stores closed from the start of 2019 through October, according to Credit Suisse. Last year, department stores were the worst performing sector in the S&P 500, and Moody’s Investors Service has forecast the sector will continue to face falling operating income.

“How many people are going to raise their hands for yet another traditional mall side of things,” said Craig Johnson, president of the consulting firm Customer Growth Partners LLC. He noted that many mall stalwarts are trying to cut down their square footage. “The market is rising for online, so they have a bit of a dilemma there.”

A representative for American Dream didn’t have immediate comment and Triple Five did not return a request for comment.

‘Now Hiring’

On a recent chilly afternoon at American Dream in January, it seemed as if any apocalypse in retail had been put on hold. Some 900 prospective employees showed up for a hiring fair at the mall, which lies just eight miles from Manhattan. The mood was upbeat.

About 60 retailers, including Sephora, Century 21 and The Children’s Place Inc., were accepting applications. Many were apparently falling over themselves to offer jobs, with some interviewing and hiring applicants on the spot, while touting the competitive benefits they offered. Some chains gave out freebies. Another hiring fair will take place on Feb. 17.

One college organized a bus to transport students to the event. Local teenagers who had grown up hearing about this long-stalled mall now were getting their first jobs there. Dejuana Thompson, 19, was among the attendees. She received a job offer from Uniqlo.

New Jersey’s American Dream Mall Readies for Its Ultimate Test

“I feel more successful here,” said Thompson. “I feel that I would have an opportunity at every one of these jobs.”

Some companies are taking advantage of the project to enter the lucrative -- but competitive -- New York retail market for the first time. Evereve, the woman’s apparel chain based in Edina, Minnesota, will have its first area store in the mall.

And while Macy’s, which is struggling through its own transition in this new retail era, doesn’t plan to open a location there, it wants to keep the option open. It will send a team to the mall when it opens, CEO Gennette said -- despite the company’s strategy to shrink its presence at malls.

“If a great opportunity came our way, I wouldn’t say no,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jordyn Holman in New York at jholman19@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sally Bakewell at sbakewell1@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Roeder

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