{safe_alt_text}Manufacturing the new Main Street

Lifestyle centers change the face of retail – from malls to suburbia to downtowns.

By Dan Sadowsky

In 1996, Steve Korth looked out at Oakway Center, his family’s 1960s-era development across the river from downtown Eugene, and saw a fully occupied but dowdy hodgepodge of retail and office buildings in need of more than just a facelift.

Over the ensuing decade, he turned the mall “inside-out,” removing all but four of the site’s 25 original buildings, creating outward-facing store entrances with high-grade facades, and reorienting the center around five large oak trees left over from when the property was his great-grandfather’s farm.

Today, those oaks grace the park-like Heritage Courtyard in the middle of 220,000 square feet of local and national retailers such as Borders, Trader Joe’s and Chico’s. This fall, P.F. Chang’s China Bistro and women’s clothier Coldwater Creek will move into the property’s two newest storefronts.

“We basically reformatted what we wanted to do,” says Korth, director of real estate and development for the McKay Investment Company, “which was to become a high-end lifestyle center.”

Lifestyle centers — open-air marketplaces that combine upscale shopping with fine dining and entertainment in a strollable, heavily designed landscape — are shaking up how retail projects are built and rebuilt across Oregon. Big malls are spending millions to incorporate parts of the popular concept into their own properties, while more modest-sized shopping centers also remake themselves in the lifestyle center mold. For downtowns, which seem less impacted by the trend, lifestyle centers represent if nothing else a reminder that they must differentiate themselves in a crowded retail field.

More than half of the country’s 150 lifestyle centers opened in the last five years, according to the New-York based trade group International Council of Shopping Centers, including a trio in Oregon: the Streets of Tanasbourne in Hillsboro, Bridgeport Village in Tigard and the Shops at the Old Mill District in Bend. (Though very similar, Oakway Center isn’t labeled a center because “upscale national chain specialty stores” don’t yet occupy at least 50,000 square feet.)

Fred Bruning, whose $270 million Bridgeport Village development recently won the 2006 Golden Nugget Award for Best Retail Project, a building-industry award for creative achievements in architectural design and land-use planning in the West, says lifestyle centers reflect “a natural evolution of retail.”

“If you think back 30 years ago when malls were all the rage, all the tenants who were anyone wanted to be in malls,” says Bruning. “Malls were very exciting for a period of time, they grew, and then they started looking very much the same.”


ALTHOUGH LIFESTYLE CENTERS also will face the challenge of how to age gracefully, today they’re still enjoying a teen-like growth spurt. No fewer than 85 lifestyle centers are in the pipeline, according to the ICSC, though none yet is slated for Oregon. The most likely site for the state’s next entrant is a 77-acre landfill in Oregon City that Bruning has been eyeing for more than a year. Other retail analysts say lifestyle centers in some form could follow in fast-growing areas in and around Salem, Bend, Medford and Eugene.

“You look for where is there going to be significant growth in average household income of $75,000 and up,” says Dave Cuthill, real estate director with Opus Northwest. “That is the key.” Opus, a co-developer of Bridgeport Village, is developing the Landing at Evergreen, a 340,000-square-foot lifestyle center off I-205 in Vancouver, Wash., slated to open late next year.

While the number of built-from-scratch lifestyle centers should remain small, the concept is likely to have a much broader impact on overall retail development. Analysts say more and more existing shopping centers in the state’s biggest markets will reconfigure their offerings or add certain stylistic flourishes that emulate the retail Zeitgeist.

Cedar Hills Crossing, the former Beaverton Mall owned and managed by C.E. John Co. of Vancouver, Wash., is a good example. It’s in the midst of a six-year, $35 million redevelopment that adds three new exterior entrances, 16 movie screens, and themed restaurants such as Noodlin’ and McGrath’s Fish House. Local grocer New Seasons plans to open its eighth location there in September, and bookseller Powell’s is relocating its Beaverton store into a 32,500-square-foot slot there in November.

“We’re investing in the whole experience of being there,” says C.E. John vice president Mark Perniconi. “What used to be the classic strip center is pretty boring. Shopping now is a social experience, not just a buying experience.”

Although more modest in size and offerings than the typical lifestyle centers, Cedar Hill Crossing and Oakway Center represent a potentially large segment of future retail redevelopment, industry insiders say.

In Portland, high land costs and the scarcity of buildable retail-zoned parcels leave Oregon’s largest metro area “very much poised for a lot of these (redevelopment) opportunities,” says Marc Strabic, a retail broker with Trammell Crow Company.

Brokers in Eugene, Bend and Medford say these cities are also running short on large buildable tracts — a result, they say, of the state’s urban growth boundaries, which limit the spread of new development, and the absence of a sales tax, which deprives municipalities of a financial incentive to zone commercial.

“The inventory of available commercially zoned property in the Medford area is practically nonexistent. It’s all been used up,” says Bill Leever of Pulver & Leever Real Estate Company in Medford. “Even if a developer comes here with that [lifestyle center] vision, until that urban growth boundary is changed, there’s no land to accommodate that.”


FORTRESS-STYLE MALLS TAKE UP MORE LAND than any other retail concept. Most of these older centers remain viable and relatively healthy, according to analysts and tenancy figures. Fewer than 1,500 of the 5 million square feet in the Portland area’s four “super-regional malls” were unoccupied as of June 30, according to CoStar Group, which provides information services to the commercial real estate industry.

But that’s not to say they are content with dated looks and store formats. Across Oregon, says Opus Northwest’s John Bartell, “mall owners are adapting their regional malls to the lifestyle concept and marrying it to their existing property.”

In the Portland area, Washington Square Mall recently sank $50 million into a new 80,000-square-foot retail wing with exterior storefronts that house the Cheesecake Factory, Abercrombie & Fitch and other high-end retailers. Clackamas Town Center is spending an undisclosed amount to add 40 new stores, a 20-screen theater complex and two new outdoor shopping “villages” with a special Northwest-themed design.

Bend River Mall changed its name to Bend River Promenade last December to reflect a $6.5 million refurbishment that razed the mall’s southern half and added outward-facing retail spaces, landscaping and nicer building facades. And in Salem, Lancaster Mall gutted shop space to make room for an 11-screen cinema.

Three miles from Eugene’s Oakway Center, Gateway Mall in Springfield is both mimicking and distinguishing itself from its lifestyle center neighbor. The 850,000-square-foot enclosed mall recently built a streetscaped breezeway to connect the mall to a new Kohl’s department store, and tried to burnish its image as a safe, family-friendly destination by filling its largest interior courtyard with a new kids’ play space. “The best approach to competing with a lifestyle center is to complement it,” says general manager Ron Glover.

Downtowns have pursued a similar strategy. When shops like Banana Republic and the Gap first started opening in the Old Mill District five years ago, Bend broker Gardner Williams and others thought the unique riverfront project “was going to kill downtown Bend,” but, “it hasn’t touched it,” he says.

Although the Old Mill’s owners say its retail sales per square foot exceed the national average, and a planned 50,000-square-foot build-out is already 40% leased, Williams describes the nearby central retail district as “full and healthy,” which he attributes to Bend’s surging population and downtown’s complementary tenant lineup of boutiques, specialty shops and galleries.

Downtown backers in Portland and Eugene agree that lifestyle centers don’t take away business from the inner core. “It’s not an either-or,” says Sandra McDonough, president of the Portland Business Alliance. If anything, she says, lifestyle centers are another reminder that central-city interests need to focus on “what makes the downtown experience unique and attractive to shoppers,” like independent retailers and cultural institutions.

That’s true for Eugene as well, says Michelle Emmons, a marketing consultant for Downtown Eugene Inc. And planners trying to revitalize Eugene’s West Broadway District, she notes, have to worry about drawing not only attractive retailers, but getting the right mix of residences, offices and arts-related amenities, too.

Emmons says downtowns should emulate lifestyle centers’ focus on assembling a roster of mutually beneficial tenants. Recognizing the interplay among retailers “will become increasingly more important as we provide for a mix of different uses in downtown Eugene,” she says.

Less than two miles away at Oakway Center, the ideal mix for Steve Korth is liable to evolve. Analysts say lifestyle centers are still finding their way in the retail landscape; some argue that because of their multiple-building layouts and distinct storefront looks, they can readily adapt to changing consumer tastes or shift to residential or office uses if demand warrants.

Korth’s present task is to build out approximately 35,000 square feet for new retailers in the coming year. Redevelopment at his 25-acre site, it seems, is ongoing. “With any major center like this,” he says, “you’re never really done.”


Dan Sadowsky is a Portland writer who began his journalism career in Atlanta, where he spent four years covering urban education, regional sprawl and other topics for several news organizations. He’s previously explored poultry growers, green builders and immigration law for
Oregon Business.


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