Wednesday, December 23, 2015

White Flint Mall now a pile of rubble (Photos) #DeadMall

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 41

Welcome to The Dark Side of White Flint, an ongoing series about the not-so-wonnerful, wonnerful, wonnerful side of urbanizing the suburbs of Montgomery County.


Where the grand White Flint Mall once stood on Rockville Pike is only a pile of rubble. Where shoppers might this week have navigated the jammed parking lots in a scramble for last-minute holiday gifts...where they might have dined at fine restaurants like The Cheesecake Factory and P.F. Chang's after completing those tasks...and where they might have taken in the latest blockbuster chapter in the Star Wars saga...sits a pile of rubble.

I'll conclude on behalf of the mall that thrived until the owners pulled the plug with the words of Bill Shakespeare:

“But let it be. Horatio, I am dead;  
  Thou livest; report me and my cause aright
  To the unsatisfied.”


34 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for siding with the mall and against the "White Flint Mall failed" propaganda. What a sad and wasteful scene this is.

Anonymous said...

The parking lots were never "jammed". Blockbuster movies never premiered at the theaters there. Cheesecake Factory and PF Changs are hardly "fine dining".

And ending with a quote from Hamlet? What an insane drama queen you are.

Anonymous said...

7:00 AM Are you kidding? The lots at White Flint were jammed during the holidays. I'm talking about when they had more than 5 stores open..lol.
Before Lerner's managed decline strategy.

Anonymous said...

We do know that the mall is an inanimate object correct? It is just is a bunch of materials without feelings or a will of its own.

Anonymous said...

The parking "lots" were never jammed, only the front surface lot was jammed because people either were too dumb to realize the abundance of parking around the mall or were too lazy to drive around. The garage with the back entrance to D&B was never even close to getting full.

Anonymous said...

7:14 AM Depends what year you're talking about. When the place was fully leased, with the book store, etc., it was packed.

Anonymous said...

Cheesecake Factory and PF Chang are hardly "fine" dining lol but glad there are nearby locations.

Anonymous said...

The mall opened with such excitement and fanfare. Bloomies, L&T, I Magnin. And YES, the lots were full, although you could usually get a spot up top on the garage.

Although not fine dining, Cheesecake Factory and PF Chang were upscale compared to most malls' food courts.

After I Magnin left and the bookstore took over the 2 level space, the mall was still jumping.

For some reason, it fell out of favor with management, who ran it into the ground. Literally.

Anonymous said...

We are going to a fancy sit down restaurant tonight Mom. They got even got paper menus!

Anonymous said...

How nice, Dyer's troll is taking his mom to dinner tonight.

Anonymous said...

Dyer's shill couldn't even wait two minutes before responding. LOL

Anonymous said...

"The mall opened with such excitement and fanfare."

As did every single other dead mall in the country.

Keep living in the past.

Anonymous said...

As weird as some of the dyer attacks are, defenders are being just as weird to do quickly jump to his defense no matter what

Betsy said...

That's a bit harsh but yeah, most things open with excitement and fanfare. It's sad this mall died but there's hope for something much better with this new plan. Hopefully it can get going sooner than later

Anonymous said...

I came here to share my thoughts about the mall when it opened. Remembering things fondly does not mean you live in the past.

You folks are so mean. Calling me names, and disparaging me. For what? Because I lived here then?

You should be ashamed of yourselves. Neanderthals.



Anonymous said...

Can't wait for another disaster to be built.

Anonymous said...

Betsy must be the shill. Posted in 3 minutes.

Guest said...

Just saying back in the mid 90's White Flint was very much packed and I remember having to park on the outer ring area near those doctor's offices and back entrance to the PetSmart.

Betsy said...

You got me! :)

Anonymous said...

Guest,
Thanks for a glimmer of humanity.

Back before there was a Petsmart or a Shoppers, it was a different strip mall. People used it as overflow parking for the mall during the holidays.
Before then, on that spot was a Government Employees Mart, also known as G.E.M.
It was a pre-cursor to Costco-type businesses.

Anonymous said...

And, since I'm feeling nostalgic, before the Pike & Rose development, before the Toys-R-Us strip mall, it was a field with trees. Quite the kerfluffle ensued when the site was to be developed into a Korvette's.

Anonymous said...

Lol. This is what all the NIMBY's never think about. Before their own homes were there, it was something else. But to develop their home was fine. Anything further is a travesty.

Anonymous said...

The "kerfluffle" was about the crows. It was a nationally recognized crow breeding ground. Not the residents complaining. The bird people put up the fight.

Guest said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

"And, since I'm feeling nostalgic, before the Pike & Rose development, before the Toys-R-Us strip mall, it was a field with trees."

It was a farm. It's a fascinating story, actually. The owner still runs a small farm in downtown Silver Spring: https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-farmers-dream-in-downtown-silver-spring/2011/06/09/AGmmbLPH_story.html

Anonymous said...

@12:48 PM this is 11:59 AM - G.E.M is before my time but my parents still occasionally mention that store!

G. Money said...

Back in the 90s, before everyone had high speed internet, this mall was packed. Great work, detectives.

Anonymous said...

I guess Lerner/Tower kicked out Bloomingdale's and Borders too right?

All the area malls below have been forced to redevelop in some way, shape, or form in order to to survive. They had full parking lots 20 years ago too...

- Landmark Mall, Alexandria
- Springfield Mall, Springfield
- Ballston Common Mall, Arlington
- Landover Mall, Landover
- Lakeforest Mall, Gaithersburg
- White Flint Mall, North Bethesda
- Owings Mills Mall, Owings Mills
- Frederick Towne Mall, Frederick
- Laurel Mall, Laurel
- Hunt Valley Mall, Hunt Valley
and that's just in this area...

Market forces/trends are constantly changing and you have to adapt to survive. Maybe the author (and his friend in the comments) refuse to use Amazon or any other form of online shopping, but that isn't the case for most of America.

The market can only support a handful of traditional malls that need to be larger than 1m SF, separated by at least 10-15 miles, and supported by strong demographics. Examples: Arundel Mills, Westfield Montgomery, Pentagon City, Mall at Columbia, and Tysons Center.

Anonymous said...

White Flint failed because they never had a Hot Shoppes or Roy's.

Robert Dyer said...

Guys, Westfield Montgomery and Tysons were packed this holiday season. Broadband isn't the problem, it's owners who pull the plug (or "accidentally" run their property into the ground) in hopes of a bigger payday from luxury apartments.

Anonymous said...

It's their right I guess.

Anonymous said...

The Lerners built a new Bloomingdales in Chevy Chase and closed the one in White Flint?

The Lerners caused the entire Borders chain to fail?

Oh, really?

Anonymous said...

I grew up in the 80s and 90s here in MoCo and White Flint has always been really empty compared to Montgpmery Mall. It was really nice for sure but just really empty.

Also, worst eatery ever.

Wrol said...

That eatery was pretty pathetic. The only real draws were the Pf Chang and D&B, and those even I grew out of. Then I only went for the post office.

The movie theater was a last choice kinda affair.