Showing posts with label white flint mall closing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white flint mall closing. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

P.F. CHANG'S SETS CLOSING DATE FOR WHITE FLINT MALL RESTAURANT AHEAD OF DEMOLITION

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 33

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.

If you're a fan of White Flint Mall like me, and the P.F. Chang's restaurant there, you'll want to stop in for dinner soon. The restaurant says it will close for good on January 4, 2015.

Gil Fornaris, Market Partner with P.F. Chang's China Bistro, said that the White Flint restaurant is thankful for the many patrons who have supported it over the last 15 years. He said those customers, who made P.F. Chang's one of the most popular dining destinations in the mall, are welcome at the chain's Chevy Chase location at 5406 Wisconsin Avenue after January 4.

In the meantime, service will continue as always at the White Flint Mall location through January 4.

Even after mall owners had made the risky bet to pull the plug on the fully-leased retail center, and redevelop it as an urban town center, P.F. Chang's remained a mainstay along with Lord & Taylor. The latter owns its mall space, and will not be included in the pending demolition. P.F. Chang's was one of several dining draws that made it difficult to find a close parking space on weekends at the mall even just a few years ago. Will that crowd return for the new development?

Although the upscale mall and its impressive architecture will be gone, P.F. Chang's is one tenant that plans to return as part of the new development on the mall site. Alas, most other tenants will not be back, having closed for good or moved to other locations. There is currently no official date for the opening of that future P.F. Chang's at the mall site.

Welcome to the Dark Side.

Go down the rabbit hole and explore the Dark Side of White Flint:

The Beginning

Dave and Buster's closes at White Flint Mall

The Veil of Death

A Classic Mall Movie Theater: The Balcony is Closed

Final Scenes from Abandoned Saab Dealership

The Final Hours of Mid-Pike Plaza

The Last Days of Toys R Us

Monday, October 13, 2014

ALL SEATING REMOVED AT WHITE FLINT MALL, PLUS: P.F. CHANG'S TURNS PINK

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 32

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.

In the game of musical chairs at White Flint Mall, the music has stopped, and everyone has lost. The mall has removed all benches and chairs, leaving nowhere for mall patrons to sit. One elderly person seeking relief was propped up on a marble shelf.

Wikipedia has a couple of relevant notes on Musical Chairs that might apply to White Flint Mall and the area's future. "The player who is left without a chair is eliminated from the game." It is the paying customer who has been eliminated at the mall, first by the closure of virtually all stores and restaurants, and now through the final indignity of having no place to rest. That also reflects the risk the mall's owners are taking, in driving away a huge customer base who will have gone elsewhere (downtown Bethesda, Westfield Montgomery Mall, Pike & Rose and Rio/Washingtonian Center, to name a few) long before any new "town center" opens on the current mall's property. "Playing musical chairs...can also refer to a condition where people have to expend time searching for a resource, such as having to travel from gasoline station to gasoline station when there is a shortage." Sounds like White Flint and downtown Bethesda after all of the gas stations have been redeveloped into luxury condos.



NOTE: Please do not steal these pictures and post them elsewhere without getting my permission first. All photos ©2014 Robert Dyer @ Bethesda Row

In other White Flint Mall news, no, the horses outside of P.F. Chang's were not vandalized. Rather, they have been turned pink for Breast Cancer Awareness Month. They are using the hashtag #PaintPFChangsPink.


Thursday, August 14, 2014

DAVE AND BUSTER'S CLOSES AT WHITE FLINT MALL (PHOTOS)

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 30

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.

Welcome to 
The Dark Side of White Flint: 
Millenial Edition.

"Hot, young millennials" are ostensibly the target audience for the new, urbanized "more muscular" White Flint. Last night, the only business currently drawing millennials to White Flint was packing up and moving out of town. Ordered out first by the owners of White Flint Mall, and then by a court ruling, Dave and Buster's has complied, closing its doors for good after 18 years.

The rotating D&B sign was stilled, then removed. Arcade machines like Gone Fishing, and Whac-a-Mole were being boxed up for shipping. Teddy bears lay on a brick wall inside the restaurant. In the corridors last night, the only sound was the hum of the escalator leading up to Dave and Buster's. A security guard informed a young, millennial couple approaching the arcade-restaurant that the business had closed. With a dramatic flourish, he flipped a switch, and the escalator stopped moving. Silence. Dave and Buster's was no more.

For those with scorecards in hand, here's the latest update on the urbanization of suburban White Flint: Zero chef-driven restaurants coming on board. Zero Fortune 500 corporate headquarters signed on. And zero 30-story, Class A office towers with Intelsat or the CEB headquarters, as Fairfax and Arlington counties recently celebrated.

The only thing remotely like Dave and Buster's on the boards right now for White Flint is Pinstripes, a bowling alley, bocce court and bistro all-in-one. A sign posted at the shuttered Dave and Buster's just about says it all. "Want to have fun, kids? Hit the interstate for Arundel Mills Mall!" A highly-successful indoor mall, to boot! Drive, drive, drive!

Gone fishing, indeed.
No more fun and games!

Click to enlarge to spot
the teddy bears on the wall

A final look inside
Dave and Buster's

Hasta la vista, millenials!

The sign no longer turns,
the escalator no longer hums
Close-up of the dismantled,
formerly-rotating sign at
Dave and Buster's

Don't worry, there'll be plenty
of barista and jeans-folding
jobs available for millenials
in the new White Flint!

Time to cut bait

The moles won! Whac-A-Mole
is shipping out in search of
hipper vibes

Game over
Turbo Theater now just a
walk-in closet

Hey, millenials, we don't have Dave
and Buster's anymore, but we do
have a repainted Metrobus.
We call it, "Rapid Transit." How
'bout it, kids? Hello? Hello?!
They hung up on us!

And then there were two
Go back to where it all started! The first episode of The Dark Side of White Flint.

Saturday, May 31, 2014

DENTIST'S OFFICE CLOSES AT WHITE FLINT MALL (PHOTOS)

One doesn't often think of going to a dental appointment at the mall, but many patients did at Dr. Rochelle Hackley, DDS Family & Cosmetic Dentistry in White Flint Mall. Dr. Hackley's office in the mall has officially closed, ahead of demolition. 

The important thing to note - Dr. Hackley has moved up the Pike, to a new location at 12230 Rockville Pike, in the Towne Plaza shopping center. One of my favorite restaurants, Chef Geoff's, is in the same shopping center. Dr. Hackley is in Suite 200-B at Towne Plaza.

You didn't think you were getting out of your dental appointment that easily, did you?


All photos copyright 2014 Robert Dyer
Please do not steal and repost these photos
without permission

Monday, May 12, 2014

WHITE FLINT MALL WING WALLED OFF AHEAD OF DEMOLITION (PHOTOS)

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 28

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.

P.F. Chang's and Dave and Buster's were still open this weekend, but everything else (with the exception of Lord and Taylor, who own their own building) has closed at White Flint. In early April, the U.S. Postal Service referred to "demolition" as the obstacle to keeping their post office open in the mall. Now a blockade of a vacant wing of the mall, and notices posted of an asbestos project within, strongly suggest demolition of the rest of the mall is not far off.
Asbestos project notice
posted at the mall


Look for these Hollywood movie set
doors; they're blocking access to
a large portion of the mall now

There's another one...and
another one

The interior is still impressive.
What a shame it's going to
be demolished by our
disposable society

What's behind the door?

Still waiting to learn the fate
of popular Dave and Buster's,
whose closure would hardly
bolster the so-called,
"Nighttime Economy"

Impressive architecture that will
be reduced to rubble

A gremlin appears to
have taken up residence
in the abandoned food
court (which Buzzfeed
and Gawker didn't know
is actually called,
"The Eatery," not "the
food court")

He's absolutely exhausted after
walking around the new,
urbanized White Flint area
without finding a single new
chef-driven restaurant, or
new Fortune 500 corporate
tenant

The directory is just chock-full
of shopping destinations

A perfectly good 1977 building
being demolished in 2014:
#FirstWorldProblems



All photos (c) 2014 Robert Dyer 
Please do not steal and repost these
photos without permission

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

WHITE FLINT POST OFFICE CLOSES (PHOTOS)

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 27

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.

The U.S. Post Office inside White Flint Mall has closed, and its replacement will not open until this summer. Patrons of the post office are being left in the lurch, much like their neighbors to the south in downtown Bethesda, where residents lost 2 walkable post offices, post office parking (regular and handicapped), and drive-up drop boxes, in what became an infamous local debacle.

If you had a P.O. Box at White Flint, those services will temporarily shift to the Kensington Post Office at 10325 Kensington Parkway - hardly walking distance. Mail services are available there, as well. Customers may also find full U.S. Mail services at the Pike Post Office, at 143 Rollins Avenue in Rockville.

White Flint won't have its own post office again until July, in the Nicholson Lane Plaza Shopping Center.

Here are photos from these final hours of the vacant post office, which will indeed be missed by nearby residents:





Friday, April 11, 2014

WHITE FLINT MALL SOCIAL MEDIA GOES DARK - IS THIS THE END? (PHOTO)

Is the final closure of White Flint Mall at hand?

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 26

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.

First it was announced this week that the White Flint Mall U.S. Post Office would close this Saturday, April 12. Then we learned Ted Lerner's own brother, Leonard Lerner, filed suit against the mall's management and ownership to stop the mall's demolition, saying it violates the terms of the 1975 partnership agreement (in which Leonard holds a 2% stake, according to the Washington Business Journal). And I'm backing Leonard on this, just as I support Lord & Taylor and Dave and Buster's efforts to stop the demolition.

Now it gets really weird. Check out this screenshot:
Here's the screen I got
when loading the official
White Flint Mall website
last night

Yesterday, the White Flint Mall website disappeared. And, as best as I can tell, so did their Facebook page. A mall Twitter account remains online, but has not tweeted since 2011 (and only tweeted 12 times when it was operational).

Does this mean the mall is about to shutter for good?

There is conflicting evidence. Note that the Friends of White Flint article mentions the USPS had to vacate, because "demolition planned for their mall space prevents them from staying any longer." That is a very significant statement.

But last night, I called Dave and Buster's and P.F. Chang's, the two remaining restaurant tenants. Employees who answered said both restaurants would be open today, and this weekend, as usual. Since the USPS is open this Saturday, too, that may well be the case.

What about beyond this weekend? Remember when Hamburger Hamlet employees insisted they were not closing, hours before the entire contents of the restaurant were due to auctioned off?

Stay tuned!

Read more in this series:

Part 26: The final hours of Mid-Pike Plaza.
Part 1: White Flint Mall Phase 1 demolition photos.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

MRS. FIELDS, ROBERT LEWIS SALON CLOSE AT WHITE FLINT MALL (PHOTOS)

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 23

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.

Another pair of holdouts at dying White Flint Mall have closed. No more cookies at Mrs. Fields, and no more salon appointments at Robert Lewis Salon.

Coincidentally, Debbi Fields opened her first cookie shop in California in 1977 - the same year that White Flint Mall opened to great acclaim on Rockville Pike.
Mrs. Fields at White Flint Mall
Robert Lewis Salon
at White Flint Mall


Monday, January 06, 2014

THE CURIOUS CASE OF THE WASHINGTON POST AND THE CLOSING OF WHITE FLINT MALL

The Dark Side of White Flint, Part 20:

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.

After ignoring the first phase of demolition at White Flint Mall last year, a curious thing happened: the Washington Post published a story about the "last Christmas" at the North Bethesda shopping mecca. What made it "curious?" The story didn't strictly follow the Post's notoriously pro-development company line (the Post and Post Co. actually have financial interests in several properties around the DC area, including their downtown headquarters. Acceptance of "smart growth" propaganda in the region is essential to maximizing the potential profits of those properties in DC, along the Alexandria waterfront, and in Southern Maryland).

In fact, the story was a bit of a backfire, for those who believe the suburbs and indoor malls are "over," and "a mistake," and should be paved over as dense urban areas. A backfire, because the details on the mall's architecture, opening and golden era sounded so much better than what's to come: another cookie cutter urban town center. One reason this turned out to be pretty good article, is that the reporter herself has her own nostalgia for the 1980s, as those who have read Jen Chaney's longtime work in the Gazette and Post are already aware. The article mentions that a photography volume of classic American malls is in such demand, the publisher can't print enough copies. The conclusion the reader comes away with, is that the end of White Flint Mall is a sad turn of events, not something to celebrate. 

Even the Post photos indirectly made a pretty devastating point about how White Flint will change between today and the future. Two pictures that accompanied the piece showed the pleasant view and very nice architecture of the mall, as seen from Rockville Pike. Most significantly, they showed something else that will soon be in short supply at the site: a clear, blue sky. Inch after square inch of picture-perfect blue sky dominated both shots. Are you ready to trade green space or open skies for parking dungeons and concrete canyons? Shopping convenience and a variety of price points for expensive boutiques?

If not, expect to feel some Astroturf "grassroots" peer pressure, and hear ridicule.

After Chaney's report caused larger numbers of current and former area residents to learn of the mall's fate, buzz about the sudden but well-planned "decline" of White Flint Mall is at an all-time high. 

Wait a minute! How do we win back the public, and make them believe that the "new" White Flint will be better than the mall?

Ridicule! And so the Post's Monica Hesse took a different tack in Saturday's Style section. According to Hesse, the problem isn't a developer pulling the plug on a successful mall with jammed parking lots to replace it with a mini-Manhattan. No! The problem is you!

And so begins her propaganda feature, "SAD LIBS" (because this is so serious, it needs to be said in ALL CAPS).

In the process, Hesse earns a fact-checking 4 Pinnochios, "Pants on Fire" score for inaccurate statements. Reversing from what the Post article had just reported December 22, Hesse says, "White Flint Mall is rumored to be closing." Rumored? It's not only going to close, it's going to be demolished!

The upshot of SAD LIBS is that if you think malls, big box stores and the suburbs are good, you're actually wrong, and you just need to get over it. You're one of a dwindling few who remain. And if you let Hesse "walk yourself through the feelings," you can let go of those decidedly-unhip feelings before your peers catch on to you. You wouldn't want your friends to find out. 

So Hesse ridicules you. Who knew that, in your quest for trees, green space, decent schools, convenient shopping, free parking, and safe, quiet neighborhoods, you were actually just on a wild goose chase for "the meaning found within mundanity?" 

Hesse concludes in 4 Pinnochio fashion: "In a way, time and progress are responsible for this closing." Aside from those standard canards employed by developers, and the few calling for urbanization of the American suburbs, the fact is, that is completely false. White Flint Mall was fully-leased just two years ago, according to the mall itself. When dining at the restaurants, I had to park far away from the building to find a space. The gusts of time and progress are not buffeting White Flint Mall; simply a desire by the landowners to roll the dice on urbanizing the suburbs, with bigger profits in mind. Were "time and progress" the cause of the traffic jam entering Westfield Montgomery Mall this Christmas? Were "time and progress" behind the wheel of all those cars filling the parking spaces there? The rumors of the American indoor mall's demise have been greatly exaggerated.

Her SAD LIBS concludeth thusly: "The end of _______________ represents a certain kind of progress." It's a certain kind alright. But is it progress?

"We can lament it," Hesse counsels, "but we can't stop it." Says who? If suburban residents don't think the county should be paved over, and forests clear-cut, for Soviet-style apartment blocs, they can stop it. They can stand up, speak out, and vote politicians out of office.