Crestwood Court: Dead Mall in its Final Days (A Walkthrough)

Ғылым және технология

Crestwood court, formally the busiest mall in the St. Louis area, has declined dramatically in the past decade. Although the mall has made an attempt to revive itself by introducing "Artspace" (renting out stores to art studios), the mall's fate was sealed when Sears announced the closure of their store. Sears was the last remaining anchor store. Today, we take a walk through the mall 2 days before all art tenants were told to move out. The mall will mostly be torn down and gutted in the coming year, hopefully being turned into a new lifestyle center if the funding is available. Follow me on:
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Пікірлер: 457

  • @faithfamilyandcountry7452
    @faithfamilyandcountry74524 жыл бұрын

    I use to go with my friends there every Friday night during jr high. Some of my favorite memories. I remember that place busting out the walls with people the food court packed and noisy. So sad. Another piece of my younger years gone. Thank you Crestwood Mall.

  • @michaelyoungstrom9412
    @michaelyoungstrom94124 жыл бұрын

    Ah the memories...who remembers Exhilarama?! I miss this mall.

  • @uesc

    @uesc

    3 жыл бұрын

    I remember the smell. I don't think i'll ever forget it

  • @Miguel-xl7wf
    @Miguel-xl7wf8 жыл бұрын

    Damn, its sad to see the mall end up like this, I had great memories there with friends and family 😓

  • @sidneygirl1
    @sidneygirl110 жыл бұрын

    thank you for sharing your video ~ I grew up visiting this mall, and later even worked at the Soutwestern Bell offices above Dillards. Spent many hours shopping at Famous Barr and shops like Casual Corner and Orange Julius. It's so very sad to see a place that was such a part of my everyday life from the late 70's through the 90's when I left St.Louis looking so desolate and void of life. Crestwood Plaza was my favorite mall as it's big skylights let in the sunshine and it always felt like a happy place.

  • @user-lw7rp4eb3k
    @user-lw7rp4eb3k5 жыл бұрын

    I shed tears here not gonna lie. I grew up in Crestwood and visited this mall almost nightly in the 90s and early 2000s the place to be. I remember how packed it was and how traffic was horrible every Friday after Thanksgiving. Sad. I can still retrace my steps and know the floorplan.

  • @josephwilliams3185
    @josephwilliams31858 жыл бұрын

    I use to work at Sears there from October 1999 thru May 2012. A very sad day indeed!!!!

  • @markcornish2519

    @markcornish2519

    6 жыл бұрын

    joseph williams worked there 2007 through may 2012

  • @lindsaybess3893
    @lindsaybess38939 жыл бұрын

    This place housed so many memories for me and my sister. Our father (who passed away in Aug. of 2012) worked for Crestwood mall from 1991 or 1992 until 2007. Since my parents were divorced, my sister and I spent many weekends wandering the mall, and our dad also took us "behind the scenes". There was actually a beautiful apartment that was located above the building where Chevy's and Dillard's was. It is sort of sad to see this, as it is an end of an era.

  • @emmexfyv

    @emmexfyv

    7 жыл бұрын

    Did not know that - who stayed in the apartment?

  • @ReyaitheShadowWolf
    @ReyaitheShadowWolf9 жыл бұрын

    This was the best mall. I live in St. Louis, so I used to go here all the time. It's so sad to see it reduced to this.

  • @bravefearlessswift2997
    @bravefearlessswift29979 жыл бұрын

    This video remains as one of my favorite dead mall videos. The narration is great, and so is the video! Thank you for filming this :)

  • @davidmurdock4740
    @davidmurdock474012 жыл бұрын

    Sometimes I wish I could travel back to the mid 90's. What a great time that was! Bigass malls, the Arch Deluxe... No sense of crushing despair...

  • @JohnAckerman93
    @JohnAckerman934 жыл бұрын

    This reminds me of a mall near my house. Developers are working on adding new life to the mall. Just sad to see what is happening to these malls. It’s all because of a thing called the internet. Love your videos Jacob! Keep up the good work!

  • @jeffs8802
    @jeffs88028 жыл бұрын

    Right out of the elevator at 4:03 it is 1984 again...My Ever Changing Moods by The Style Council playing.

  • @wolfgameinggamerwolftwinki6110
    @wolfgameinggamerwolftwinki61104 жыл бұрын

    I been there when I was a kid I went to a school near that area called south tech I watched the sad demolition of the mall It was a great wonderful mall good memories

  • @j2112c
    @j2112c10 жыл бұрын

    I half expected a hoard of zombies to to be outside the lift doors when they opened. Eerie and such a shame. what a waste of money, environment and construction. thanks for posting.

  • @m.r.newton
    @m.r.newton8 жыл бұрын

    This is getting torn down on Saturday. 😓😓😓😓

  • @MixcenyDusk
    @MixcenyDusk8 жыл бұрын

    I just wanted to say, your voice is very entertaining to listen to. :3 Very good video as well. Very informative on the location, such a sad sight to see what was once such a busy mall go downhill like that.

  • @butterboiii9810
    @butterboiii98104 жыл бұрын

    Thought I revisit my first Dead Mall video I ever watched, that started my fascination with dead malls and malls in general.

  • @Whtxombi
    @Whtxombi10 жыл бұрын

    I don't visit my local mall anymore. Not because of economic considerations or the neighborhood. I quit visiting simply because of how entirely dull it has become. When it opened, it had book, toy and electronic stores plus a pair of arcades and an pet store. Now they are all gone, replaced by clothing.

  • @23iPRO

    @23iPRO

    10 жыл бұрын

    I hardly go to the mall now. I go in the mornings if I need to go because I live in a medium size city and there really isn't nothing to do. Go to the movies, mall or main event. So the mall is always packed.

  • @LuckyLogger
    @LuckyLogger9 жыл бұрын

    great place for a zombie movie. people should take advantage of these places to do films there before they tear them down.

  • @commenter6763
    @commenter676310 жыл бұрын

    I went there all of the time in the 1990s/early 2000s. Almost every weekend we went and just browsed or shopped. Didn't have to always buy something, as you went for the experience. Later on when I began taking my first girlfriend there; bought her a ring from the Whitehall Jewelery store. There was Exhilarama, the AMC movie theater, and the food court, a classic of the mall. I even remember Athen's Cafe and the face of the guy who ran it. He was there for forever. Good times, great memories.

  • @SuperMissblueeyes
    @SuperMissblueeyes11 жыл бұрын

    It's kinda cool that you & those other guys caught each other filming. Great minds & all that!

  • @SamSitar
    @SamSitar12 жыл бұрын

    nice to see Crestwood Court before teardown. i can see how busy it was. your tours are very educational.

  • @clthomas1978
    @clthomas19784 ай бұрын

    I was a Mallrat here in the late 80's and early 90's at this mall and South County Center. I really miss the hanging out culture in public spaces that went away like that.

  • @NewWaveArch90
    @NewWaveArch9010 жыл бұрын

    Strangely appropriate dated 80s music playing in the background

  • @dnb5661
    @dnb56618 жыл бұрын

    I like how the owners of the mall played sad music

  • @OurBossFan
    @OurBossFan6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for posting.. I'm an incurable mall lover, and it's sad.. But we need to know this history.

  • @TheDestiny242
    @TheDestiny24211 жыл бұрын

    I've been a retail manager since 1987. It's sad to see the malls disapearing. Once they begin to fall apart like an old car, they become too expensive to fix and maintain. Leaky roofs, etc. I believe in not wasing good stuff, so while watching this, I wonder if they salvage any of the glass panels, store gates and jewelry counters left behind, furniture etc. We are a wasteful society while others around the world have not much at all. Thanks for posting this video.

  • @Saffirea
    @Saffirea9 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of the mall near me. But it was not closed. They lowered the rent and updated it. Took five years to redo the whole mall while people were shopping. The mall was saved and now stuff there is not cheap.

  • @rustyshackleford1808
    @rustyshackleford180811 жыл бұрын

    I remember going to this mall with a friend around Christmas time in '95. We sat down at one of the benches in the middle of the mall (near suncoast ) and the place was so packed that we struggled to even stand up again. The hum of this great mass of people moving and chatting with one another was deafening. It was overwhelming to me, and I remember just sitting there watching this and feeling as though the place was pulsating with its own life.

  • @DatTyGuy
    @DatTyGuy8 жыл бұрын

    Seeing that you're from STL and as I am too, I love this video... You should really really do one on the Mills and show how it turned to nothing almost

  • @angiemarie4748
    @angiemarie4748 Жыл бұрын

    My mom used to take me there when I was a kid in the 70's. I remember it being quite busy.

  • @kadacho
    @kadacho11 жыл бұрын

    wow, great video- very sad, what a beautiful mall...thank you for filming.

  • @palebeachbum
    @palebeachbum10 жыл бұрын

    Malls have really fallen out of popularity. They were THE place to go shopping and hang out on weekends and after school. Now they're dead if they haven't already closed. The only sense I can make of it is the popularity of the internet and online shopping has taken the place of malls. Having grown up in the 80's when malls were all the rage, these empty, abandoned malls I find really eery and disheartening. Instead of getting out to shop, people are sitting in front of their computers in their panties. It sounds like a creepy movie of a dystopian society. Really bothers me. I have great memories of going to malls as a child and how lively they were.

  • @artmccomeskey738

    @artmccomeskey738

    9 жыл бұрын

    yup....going to the mall was the thing to do back then....parents would drop you off and you could spend the day with your friends hangin out having fun.....those big glass doors would slide open and you'd hear all the sounds of the people in there and smell the cinnabon rolls cookin......now its all gone ...like you said cheaper stuff on the internet and you can shop in your underwear lol

  • @CDNSpartan

    @CDNSpartan

    9 жыл бұрын

    Not west Edmonton mall. Always crowded except for the Target which is closing. I go to West Edmonton mall lots. Biggest mall in Canada and North America.

  • @onewhitedude
    @onewhitedude8 жыл бұрын

    The store at 4:05 was The Men's Wearhouse, which later become The Dance Co-op St. Louis. And the store across from the food court elevator was a Aeropostale.

  • @jonaichs1976
    @jonaichs19765 жыл бұрын

    Alot of great memories in that place. So sad to have seen it go.

  • @ManiacalMichael504
    @ManiacalMichael50412 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video. I've seen my share of dead/dying malls, and one that was almost there but had a surprising resurrection. That one looked like it was really nice in its heyday, shame to see it now.

  • @heveymetale58691
    @heveymetale586917 жыл бұрын

    When the mall was sold back in the '90s, the first thing that the new owners did was jack up the rent. STL Bread Co. was the first to leave. At the same time, the same Co. bought West County, jacked up the rents and as it too began to fail, they were able to get TIF funding to revamp and enlarge that mall. Unfortunately, the same didn't happen at Crestwood. The stores kept leaving and the mall was eventually sold again. By this time, people were going to the new West County and Galleria because Crestwood had been run into the ground. This was a thriving mall. Greed and lack of foresight killed it, not a change in demographics.

  • @suzzex
    @suzzex12 жыл бұрын

    You're introduction was fantastic. This is so similar to Lafayette Plaza in Bridgeport, CT. Opened in the mid 1960's with eight Dover elevators, the center court elevator being one of the first ever glass Dover elevators and one of the first ever mall glass elevators. The mall was the-place-to-be, bringing prosperity and life to Bridgeport. The mall started to suffer in 1981, getting even worse in the 1990's, then saw its death in the 2000s.

  • @rustyshackleford1808
    @rustyshackleford180811 жыл бұрын

    I'm always saying the same thing to people using almost exactly those same words. Compared to today everything in the 80's seemed so much more modern, futuristic and hopeful. Speaking as another child of the 80's, you would have loved this place. It was all skylights, neon signs, stainless steel and glass fixtures and colorful displays. And the place was packed with cute girls in bright clothes with that crimped 80's hair thing. I wish that I could go back in time just to hang around there.

  • @VIIArtesLiberales
    @VIIArtesLiberales7 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Sad to see this mall is heavily hit by the ongoing recession.

  • @markmetzler9108
    @markmetzler91087 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Crestwood from 1967 to 1969. This WAS the place to be. Back then, it was not as big as it was when they closed, but everything you needed could be found here. Sad to see it left to just a memory, however, it is just a statistic to retail evolution.

  • @jaymorpheus11
    @jaymorpheus119 жыл бұрын

    This video is pretty good. There should be a proposal from congress or local government to mall owners to take video of their locations along with some historical narrative before they're closed. These old malls are going to be a wonderful part of history. The malls that exist now are great too,or at least they look nicer than wal-marts.

  • @lukekuykendall6366
    @lukekuykendall63669 жыл бұрын

    I remember Crestwood Mall was a big place to shop when I was a kid. I remember Exhilarama in the basement adjacent to the food court. I drive past this place everyday on my way to work and it's really depressing to look at. I know they sold it like 2 years ago to a group of investors, but they've been dragging their feet and are yet to do anything with it. I know it will still be up at least through Spring 2016, because they're filming scenes for "The Walking Dead" in February 2016.

  • @ricovali9245
    @ricovali92459 жыл бұрын

    Our mall met the same fate.most malls died when anchor stores finally realized it was cheaper to have a single structure store.which eliminated leasing and high maintenance fees.we had a yearly fee of almost $100,000.00 a year for maintenance fees alone.which was absurd.and it kept going up each year.we eventually moved out when the lease agreement expired.we tried to negotiate bit the mall refused to budge.

  • @ricovali9245

    @ricovali9245

    9 жыл бұрын

    This was back in 2004 when it happened.

  • @RevengeofGothzilla
    @RevengeofGothzilla8 жыл бұрын

    I like how all the stores seem to have been dance studios and photography places.

  • @ThomasSpychalski

    @ThomasSpychalski

    7 жыл бұрын

    After the stores start closing, business like that will take the space for a time usually. hair salons, studios, churches..etc etc...

  • @viper7981
    @viper79819 жыл бұрын

    This mall is a part of my childhood and its so sad to have seen it go... Many memories reside in this place. So sad :(

  • @Daniel28021991
    @Daniel280219919 жыл бұрын

    This place is huge!!! Great tour

  • @Edwynn12
    @Edwynn1211 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video dude!

  • @BuccaneerBruce
    @BuccaneerBruce12 жыл бұрын

    It's always interesting to see what becomes of these malls. I have been through a store closing at a mall and it was just depressing. The mall is long gone now over here in KC too.

  • @antdx316
    @antdx3168 жыл бұрын

    The problem is where the vision of somewhere else that works is brought into a different area thinking it would be the same result. The risk of unknown ways of attraction.

  • @skeletal13
    @skeletal1312 жыл бұрын

    Crestwood's problem is that it is located 3 miles or so from two major highways in St. Louis County, whereas South County Mall, West County Mall, and the Galleria are all located right off of their nearest highway exits. Also, it is located near Sunset Hills, which was decimated by tornados in the last year with no interested developers. I feel like I had last visited this place in the last few years. It's sad to see it like this. I wish someone could bring it back.

  • @asukasoryu69
    @asukasoryu696 жыл бұрын

    I think the next mall to close up here is going to be Southdale Center in Edina, MN. It's slowly losing it's magnet stores, JC Penney and Macy's both went out this year.

  • @AccordionManiac
    @AccordionManiac12 жыл бұрын

    Liked how there was someone else filming at the same time and place as you

  • @SebisRandomTech
    @SebisRandomTech8 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of Century III mall in the Pittsburgh area. Was one of the best places to shop at one point but nowadays it's basically a ghost town. Hard to understand why because all of the surrounding shops keep plenty business, but now there are talks of trying to bring the place back to life. That would be cool to see.

  • @JUST_ONE_ID10T

    @JUST_ONE_ID10T

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Sebi's Random Tech I never went to century III mall but i have drove past it. I remember going to the Monroville mall as a child. I haven't been there as an adult. I live way up north in the Kittanning and Ford city area and it's just to damn far to travail with the price of gas. Up here right now we have a Trader horn going out of business that was in the old Jamesway store. Last summer we lost 2 grocery stores after walmart remolded and became a super walmart.

  • @selysse
    @selysse8 жыл бұрын

    I've watched a few of these dead mall walking tours now, and they all leave me with the impression that the images would best be captures by still photography.

  • @manystar
    @manystar7 жыл бұрын

    I love the design and layout, it looks current...i hope it comes back to form, such a beautiful mall

  • @TheElevatorChannel

    @TheElevatorChannel

    7 жыл бұрын

    www.ksdk.com/news/local/photos-crestwood-courts-demolition/354118026 :(

  • @manystar

    @manystar

    7 жыл бұрын

    The Elevator Channel oh that's so sad

  • @EmperorSquidysChannel
    @EmperorSquidysChannel10 жыл бұрын

    They had a lot of nice stores. I won't forget this mall.

  • @alexmcguire211
    @alexmcguire21110 жыл бұрын

    I remember watching Santa come down in a helicopter there for a couple years. Also a great place to drop us kids off for a little while when we were hanging with friends. I don't remember the food court having much on the bottom but the game room was tons of fun. I have been there a couple years ago when it was nothing but art shops and studios. Kind of depressing, but we were able to catch a flix, best seat in the house when your the only one in the theater.

  • @alexmcguire211

    @alexmcguire211

    10 жыл бұрын

    thought I would add, as i remember it, the food court was a large open space with several vendors along the left side with tables in the middle. to the right was a rather large gaming arcade area. They had a rollercoaster simulator, the type you get all your friends into a large flight simulation pod on hydraulic stilts that would shift around as you went around the rollercoaster played on screen.

  • @JG24ROX54
    @JG24ROX5410 жыл бұрын

    You need to check out the Abandoned Garden Plaza Hotel in St.Peters, the elevator doors still open but I don't dare actually go in. The place is really boarded up, but someone told me that they got a door open at the left side of the building so I think you can get in now. Look in the delivery area to the left of the building (if you're looking from the interstate). I have 3 videos on my channel of the building that can give you a good idea what you're walking into. In the 3rd we actually show the entrance that had been blocked by a locked door afterwards, but has since been kicked open. Also please let me know if you decide to go, 'cuz I can't wait to go back! Great footage by the way!

  • @bittertasteofsweet
    @bittertasteofsweet11 жыл бұрын

    Nice video and description...looks like a nice place, what a shame....and I agree the parking garage was creepy

  • @a.dudeman7715
    @a.dudeman77158 жыл бұрын

    Such a sad sight. You can tell it was a busy mall at one point in it's life.

  • @dave4708
    @dave470811 жыл бұрын

    Very similar situation in my home town with the Macon Mall.After a addition was added in 1996,it was the largest mall in Georgia.Over the last many years the area around the mall had declined.Security had become a real problem and many people were afraid to go to the mall after dark.In 2008 a new mall was built in a better area of Macon and many of the stores relocated to the new mall.The mall was sold and the new owners torn down the 1996 addition and have remolded,but it is mostly empty.

  • @SFCarWashChannel
    @SFCarWashChannel8 жыл бұрын

    I recently went to a dead mall that is scheduled to be demolished in January. Being there was quite strange.

  • @Madcook01Blogspot
    @Madcook01Blogspot10 жыл бұрын

    that is like our mall here in Helena. It used to be a very busy place, but after a few years they have lost businesses to smaller shopping centers, or they have opened their own stand alone stores in the new town center. It seems that Malls are just not as popular as they used to be. Unless there is some sort of Draw to them like Mall of America, or a theme park in the mall, its just a thing of the past.

  • @rustyshackleford1808
    @rustyshackleford180811 жыл бұрын

    That video was very well done and professional. I ride past the full length of the cavernous garages and the massive hulk of the mall along Grant's Trail on my bike during the warmer months. I always think the same thing: "What a waste!"

  • @dubby46
    @dubby4611 жыл бұрын

    Great video.thanks.

  • @msj191961
    @msj19196112 жыл бұрын

    I have an idea. Because the mall will probably be torn down, the elevator is probably going too. You should put in a request for the elevator parts if you want them. There is a building in my town that is scheduled for demolition and I already requested the fire alarm system parts. Just contact whoever is the land owner and I'm sure he would let you have those elevator parts. Just a suggestion. Awesome video! :)

  • @JacobSpinkCamera
    @JacobSpinkCamera9 жыл бұрын

    Dude, thanks for touring St.Louis buildings, because I live in St.Louis

  • @rustyshackleford1808
    @rustyshackleford180811 жыл бұрын

    I think that is actually a completely awesome idea. A good part of that mall is nothing but office space anyway. The parking garage could even be converted to a storage facilitly and garage for fire/ems, police and road maintenance vehicles.

  • @TheSimplyJill
    @TheSimplyJill12 жыл бұрын

    Man, I hate to see mall's in this condition. It's so depressing to walk through them especially when its a mall that you grow up in or one that once was booming with heavy traffic. Where I live, they were able to turn one dead mall into multiple business offices. Hopefully they can find some use with this mall.

  • @Docdaugh
    @Docdaugh10 жыл бұрын

    A nice narration to a sad scene! Half of my life was spent managing a retail store in a mall. I was glad to get out...but...there were some good times as well! It's always sad to see this kind of change, it's like going to an airplane "boneyard" to see all the planes that don't fly anymore. High crime, high prices and the internet are partially to blame, the real reason is economics and taxes not only for the retailer but the customer as well. Good job!

  • @Bewitjanus
    @Bewitjanus10 жыл бұрын

    Great atmospheric video. You sound like that Max Headroom guy. I think his name is Matt Frewer.

  • @Krzrrazrrokr
    @Krzrrazrrokr10 жыл бұрын

    I would have liked to seen this place during its prime.

  • @emmexfyv

    @emmexfyv

    7 жыл бұрын

    It was cool. Much of my younger years spent shopping there, eating there and seeing movies there.

  • @JohnMGilbert
    @JohnMGilbert10 жыл бұрын

    Malls had their heyday in the 70's and 80's. It was the answer to downtown shopping. The downtown's had their heyday until everyone had a car. I remember my dad driving around the block many times just to find a parking space. The mall offered unlimited parking and no walking in the rain! Next in the evolution was the big box store. Now the store comes to you. Shop in your undies and who needs a parking space? What's next? A drone delivers your package with no UPS man ringing your door.

  • @ChrisFlegg

    @ChrisFlegg

    10 жыл бұрын

    You are so right, i guess its a constant evolution! Google Delivery Drones, Amazon are one step ahead!

  • @wendyokoopa7048

    @wendyokoopa7048

    10 жыл бұрын

    Chris Flegg you guys forget the other thing about the net Finding stuff you never would have found otherwise. I'm Wendy O Koopa and I have an addiction to ebay.

  • @ChrisFlegg

    @ChrisFlegg

    10 жыл бұрын

    Huh? I don't get what you are saying?

  • @ChrisFlegg

    @ChrisFlegg

    10 жыл бұрын

    Wait, i do now! I was only just waking when i saw the comment! I also do the ebay thing, but the ones i get sucked into most are my random Chinese selling sites. There are so many things that you never knew you needed until you see them for under $2!

  • @wendyokoopa7048

    @wendyokoopa7048

    10 жыл бұрын

    Recently I was supposed to be shopping for a laptop bag suddenly it escalated to two doom plush, and several turtle like children.

  • @Ash-qr3vy
    @Ash-qr3vy11 ай бұрын

    Lots of memories. So sad that it's long gone.

  • @paulht3251
    @paulht32518 жыл бұрын

    Some people say it's not the Internet , but it's playing a big part in it , I'm in my early 60 s and grew up during the time of going to the mall . Was the place to shop . But I must say the last two years we have been doing a lot of our shopping online plus during the Holidays you can even have your purchase gift wrapped , something stores don't even do anymore . They got rid of all the customer service years ago. 😎

  • @kakins

    @kakins

    7 жыл бұрын

    The internet may play a small role, but I say the crash of 08. People do not have much extra spending money anymore. And then they do they are spending more wisely and not just blowing a 100 bucks at the mall anymore.

  • @utubepunk
    @utubepunk9 жыл бұрын

    Kickstarter for 1. More videos like this and 2. Steadicam. :-)

  • @chrisz71
    @chrisz7110 жыл бұрын

    that escalator seemed very narrow, and the food court seemed like it would be cramped. and you've actually got a very pleasant voice to listen to.

  • @rustyshackleford1808
    @rustyshackleford180811 жыл бұрын

    The area itself is not bad at all but it is economically stagnant with an ageing population. I walked around it about the same time that this video was made and it still felt like a clean, bright and safe, if somewhat depressing place. Someone who worked nearby marks the decline to when the mall was added to the busline. They told me that store managers would come in complaining about bad behaviour and shoplifting, but I wasn't around at that point so I never experienced that firsthand.

  • @BuccaneerBruce
    @BuccaneerBruce12 жыл бұрын

    Ohh and great video.

  • @pahofilmsnz
    @pahofilmsnz12 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting Video That old shopping mall is bigger than our largest mall we have here iin Christchurch New Zealand. Great Narration you sound like Owen Wilson the actor.

  • @calebwildman3556
    @calebwildman355612 жыл бұрын

    Is is such a shame that beautiful buildings become forgotten.

  • @nook9140
    @nook91408 жыл бұрын

    LensCrafters was open until 2013 (they were the only tenant after Sears and all the independent stores closed) before it closed. I don't think this place has been demolished yet, so it's probably abandoned.

  • @kctransplant70
    @kctransplant7010 жыл бұрын

    Such a shame! Crestwood was by FAR my favorite St. Louis mall! Part of it is I've always been partial to malls that had parking garages. Blue Ridge Mall in Kansas City was another favorite. Also had a parking garage.

  • @Whtxombi
    @Whtxombi9 жыл бұрын

    I would have loved to go rummaging through the empty stores. You would be amazed what stores leave behind when they close.

  • @treymixon3618
    @treymixon361811 жыл бұрын

    the Big Town Mall closed down completely about 10 yrs ago by where i use to live in Dallas, Tx. it even had a movie theatre & a bowling alley.

  • @artiexr222
    @artiexr22212 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating!

  • @LIRR175
    @LIRR17512 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of the Nassau Mall in Levittown before they tore it down and built a BJ's. The last two tenants were a card store and Pathmark.

  • @NevadaArcade
    @NevadaArcade7 жыл бұрын

    Love these dead mall videos, we sub'd you, thanks for offering. Nevada Arcade

  • @art2daG2002
    @art2daG200210 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the tour. I enjoyed watching it. :) Overall, the structures and ambiance didn't look that bad IMO. In my town in Dallas, I'm just glad Valley View Center is getting some help from Beck Ventures, an investment management company bought the almost dead mall back last year, and they're going to revitalize the place into a mixed-use development. That mall declines due to the change of demographics from the surrounding neighborhoods, along with the remodeling of the Galleria mall next door, the expansion of NorthPark Center 7 miles south, and the opening of The Shops at Willow Bend in West Plano, 7.6 miles north from there. I'm still questioning on why Southwest Center Mall (used to be called 'Red Bird Mall') is not, or maybe slowly getting any help lately. :/

  • @santana107337
    @santana1073379 жыл бұрын

    so sad to see that and the memories attached...I remember going there in the 70's before they enclosed everything...the down escalators for the workout place was way back when the down for "bargain basement" at woolworths.... this mall was "the" place in the 80's.....lots of memories for many folks I'm sure.

  • @EarlFaulk
    @EarlFaulk11 жыл бұрын

    Looks a lot better than what Rolling Acres looked like before it closed down. There was only two stores open in the mall in 2003 however it held on until 2011.

  • @DigitalImagesToront
    @DigitalImagesToront11 жыл бұрын

    It is interesting to note that Google Street View "drives" through this mall lot as it was in 2007. You can still see the Dillard's and Macy's in place.

  • @P0V3RTY09
    @P0V3RTY0911 жыл бұрын

    St Louis isn't the only city to see this kind of thing. In fact, a big part of urban shopping were via malls back in the late 70's and early 80's. When I was a kid, a developer built a shopping mall in my neighborhood. It was built in a fairly large lot located directly in between Sears and Macy's. Sadly within 10 years most of the shops were gone. At it's Grand Opening over 40 shops were open. 5 years prior to the mall's closing only 4 shops were still opened one being an arcade.

  • @DIMEDAMAGE
    @DIMEDAMAGE10 жыл бұрын

    this is all due to internet shopping.goodbye malls

  • @krasnajazvezda2708

    @krasnajazvezda2708

    9 жыл бұрын

    Due to capitalism, internet is only a small part.

  • @novellguru

    @novellguru

    5 жыл бұрын

    I don't think so.... Malls still exist...

  • @chaddeez8446

    @chaddeez8446

    5 жыл бұрын

    Bad economy

  • @Adrians_Ideas
    @Adrians_Ideas3 жыл бұрын

    Damn... I actually have quite a few memories of going here quite a bit too. funny thing was... i was going when the mall was close to being dead completely. My two older sisters took acting classes in the building in a small spot in the front to the left i think, and my mom would always take all three of us there. (you actually went to the spot and just turned around I think at 12:29, i also remember leaving through there sometimes too.) The spot that was used was a little store that got rented/called "Dayspring" being for their acting business under Artspace i think. The entire time, i didn't even know that it was a dying mall/abandoned, because I only went to the Dayspring spot and stayed there until my sisters were done wit their classes and then wed leave. I ended up befriending two other kids there named Kai and John (if you're reading this guys, I'd totally love to catch up if possible lol) We used to bring and play with our lego star wars sets in there all the time after we found out that we played with legos back then. I never went back to the building again because my mom never took me back there after the Dayspring classes moved and got their own building somewhere else. I went to other malls that were more common though, but out of all the malls I never knew why this one wasn't like them. Not even St. Louis Mills was as dead as this place when i was going. I thought that all malls were supposed to be the same filled with people everyday, so the idea of an entire mall closing for good, becoming abandoned in the process was completely unheard of to me. (Keep in mind, at the time i was 11 to 12 so urban exploring and all the other things i do now were not even anywhere near my interests. I was a completely different kid at the time and this stuff would have scared or bored me.) My mom did ask me once if I wanted to look around, and we did, but we never looked around the entire place though, just down the hall from that one spot and that was about it. Sad to see its gone now though. I really would have loved to explore it sometime, but I ended up moving far from the area a year/two later and never kept up to date with a vast majority of the area until recently(sort of).

  • @Nico93
    @Nico938 жыл бұрын

    whats the other guy you stumbled upon a few times? recording with his phone.

  • @danielmorse6597
    @danielmorse659710 жыл бұрын

    The spaces were designed to be public and inviting to people, not just shoppers. To enjoy. Long ago the kids and crime moved in and we could no longer enjoy the spaces as the economy slowly fell. Thus crime and things changed. Kids attack a few old ladies and they stopped coming in. Section 8 housing came in and people had to leave as the neighborhoods crumbled. To the joy of developers, who just build new to last 20 years or so.

  • @Leopold3131

    @Leopold3131

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** Morse didn't say one thing about race. Are you serious?

  • @Jzs20
    @Jzs2012 жыл бұрын

    Great video. 8:33 is just creepy as hell... Dude was just sitting there caged in and staring at nothingness. I couldn't get over the parking garage, g damn all that empty space. Hard to imagine that every parking spot was once taken. Good job with the video brother

  • @jsmurd
    @jsmurd12 жыл бұрын

    @TheElevatorChannel Good video. I liked the tour of the parking garage. Did you go back and talk to those guys on the 2nd floor of the garage with the Tripod? I wonder if their video is up on KZread. I saw dieselducy's video before I saw this one. Both videos are good. That looks like a pretty big mall. Coddingtown Mall in Santa Rosa Cal. was originally an outdoor plaza but in the 80s was converted to a Mall with a roof. Thumbs up.

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