Many stores up in air

Most mall tenants wait for word if they'll be part of new project

Published: Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2006 10:07 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
The LDS Church's unveiling Tuesday of its redevelopment project begat confusion and limbo for all but a few tenants of the Crossroads Plaza and ZCMI Center malls, with vendors and clerks wondering when their operations will close, where they will go and whether they will be among those invited to occupy one of the slots available near the redevelopment site.

"To be honest, I have no idea what's going on," Rebecca Holbrook, manager of Precision Time at ZCMI Center, said late Wednesday morning. "I've heard a lot of stores will be out of here by Dec. 31, but I don't know if we'll be one of them or anything."

The same goes for Mariposa, an apparel retailer at Crossroads. Ditto the U.S. Postal Service's ZCMI Center branch. Ditto Parry's Office Supply at ZCMI Center and Ypsilon at Crossroads — soon to be Ypsilon at ZCMI Center.

During his presentation of preliminary plans for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' project to the Salt Lake City Council Tuesday, Bishop H. David Burton, presiding bishop of the church, said some retail and food vendors will find homes at the Eagle Gate Tower on South Temple and the new Key Bank Tower (now the Beneficial Financial Group building). He did not say how many retail slots will be available or when, or who will fill them. Church spokesman Dale Bills had no further information Wednesday.

Story continues below

Mr. Mac, the Utah-based men's clothier, is among the few to receive some assurance that the church will reserve a place for it during the five-year development — though details are few.

"We've been a long-standing fixture in the downtown area. We've been in the mall, we've been on Main Street, and we intend to be here for a very long time," said Stuart Christensen, manager and co-owner of Mr. Mac in the ZCMI Center. "Our agreement with them is that we'll stay somewhere on the block, or on the two blocks, in a 'mutually agreeable location."'

Where that will be, or when Mr. Mac will move there, remains unclear, Christensen said.

"We've trusted them in what they're doing, though we don't have all of the details as to where we may be or how things will change," he said. "For now, imagine a big sign that reads: OPEN FOR BUSINESS. In capital letters."

Deseret Book also has received the green light. Gail Halladay, spokeswoman for the company, said its flagship store will be temporarily relocated in the downtown area during construction, but it will remain open.

"Deseret Book has had a retail presence in downtown Salt Lake since its origin, which was 1866," Halladay said. "So we plan to remain a mainstay in the downtown area."

Like Christensen, Halladay didn't yet have specific information about when or where the store will move.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Kim Raff, Deseret Morning News

Barney Tanner, left, chats with Mr. Mac co-owner Spencer Christensen while shopping at the ZCMI Center.

previousnext

Latest comments

Utah's lessons for California

I'll ask again... WHY would anyone be jealous of those living in California?...

Stadium of Fire flag burning was fake

Great job Daily Universe - this is uncovering truth at its finest. And this...

Millsap doesn't want to return to Utah. Utah was going to offer him 8million...

Creepy. Very creepy that so many are eager to use the coercive power of...

KOC I hope you realize that you are getting worked right now. You just got...

Rush Junior | 6:00 p.m. When are you going to learn that it doesn't even...

I could be wrong on this, but I think they generally withhold names in sex...

that so many people take this as an opportunity to slander any faith!!!! what...

Mall owner seeks to retain zoning

Why is the Holladay Council wanting to put a "gun " to their head? What kind...

Contrary to what a few people have mentioned here, if the Jazz don't match...

Advertisements