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Bal Harbour Shops

Coordinates:25°53′18″N80°07′31″W / 25.88825°N 80.12519°W /25.88825; -80.12519
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shopping mall in Florida, US
Bal Harbour Shops
Map
LocationBal Harbour,Florida, US
Coordinates25°53′18″N80°07′31″W / 25.88825°N 80.12519°W /25.88825; -80.12519
Address9700Collins Avenue
Opening date1965; 61 years ago (1965)
DeveloperWhitman Family
ManagementWhitman Family
OwnerWhitman Family
ArchitectHerbert H. Johnson & Associates
Stores and servicesApproximately 100
Anchor tenants2
Floor area450,000 sq ft (42,000 m2)
Floors3
Websitewww.balharbourshops.com

Bal Harbour Shops is an open-airshopping mall inBal Harbour, Florida, an affluent suburb ofMiami Beach. WithNeiman Marcus andSaks Fifth Avenue as anchors, the mall had sales of $3,000 per square foot in 2015, ranked among the highest-grossing retail centers in the world.[1]

History

[edit]

From 1954 to 1962,Stanley Whitman travelled around the United States, studying shopping centers.[1]

In 1957, Whitman acquired the site for $2 per square foot, then a record price for retail property.[1] It was the site of a formerUnited States Armybarracks andWorld War IIprisoner-of-war camp.[1] He built a non-traditional open-air shopping mall due to thetropical climate and seaside location across the street from theAtlantic Ocean.[1] At first, Whitman hired architectVictor Gruen, but then fired him and hired Herb Johnson, based in Miami.[1]

The shopping center opened in 1965, with the inaugural collection of stores includingFAO Schwarz,Abercrombie & Fitch and Martha's, considered one of the most influential international women’s salons hosting fashion shows with designersValentino andOscar de la Renta (both of whom would later open boutiques at Bal Harbour Shops). Early European Designer store openings includedYves Saint Laurent andGucci. A few years laterCartier,Versace andChanel opened.[1]

In 1971,Neiman Marcus opened a department store at the center.[1] In 1976,Saks Fifth Avenue opened a department store at the center.[1] In 1977,Gucci opened a store at the center. By 1987, it realized sales of $1,000 per square foot.[1]

In 1982, Bal Harbour Shops was the first shopping center planned for vertical expansion to add 100,000 square feet (9,300 m2) of retail space on Level 2. In 1983, a second level was added.[1]

Overall sales at the shopping center rose from $1,000 per square foot in 1997, five times the national average, to $1,350 per square foot in 2002, $2,000 per square foot in 2008, $2,730 per square foot in 2012, and $3,000 per square foot in 2015.[1] In 2022, shopping mall had sales of $3,400 per square foot.

In 2012, the Whitman family struck a land swap deal with Church by the Sea.[2] Bal Harbour Shops agreed to build a 60,000-square-foot (5,600 m2) church[3] on a site on Kane Concourse inBay Harbor Islands that had been a car dealership.[4]

In January 2013, Bal Harbour Shops announced an equity partnership with Swire Properties to jointly develop the 500,000-square-foot (46,000 m2) retail component ofBrickell CityCentre in downtown Miami.[5]

In 2017, a $550 million enhancement plan was approved to add 241,600 square feet (22,450 m2) of new retail space and restaurants to Bal Harbour Shops with a completion date of 2024.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklMOIN, DAVID (November 14, 2015)."Bal Harbour Shops at 50: Building by the Sea"(PDF).Women's Wear Daily.
  2. ^Lilly, Christiana (September 18, 2012)."Bal Harbour Shops Strikes Deal With Church By The Sea For Retail Space Expansion".HuffPost.
  3. ^"Bal Harbour Shops expansion approved after decade in the works". May 18, 2017. Archived fromthe original on September 6, 2023. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2021.
  4. ^Bandell, Brian."Church buys car dealership to build mixed-use project,South Florida Business Journal, June 7, 2016. Accessed September 12, 2023.
  5. ^"2013 Look Back: Real Estate".American City Business Journals. December 27, 2013.
  6. ^"Bal Harbour Shops expansion approved after decade in the works".Miami Herald. May 17, 2017.

See also

[edit]
Central business district
Major urban areas
Colleges
and universities
Parks and recreation
Attractions
Major shopping centers
Transportation
Major thoroughfares
International
National
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