Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Predicting the demise of Sears & Kmart since 2017!
ClownLoach
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor
Posts: 2991
Joined: April 4th, 2016, 10:55 pm
Has thanked: 50 times
Been thanked: 309 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by ClownLoach »

c95xrk wrote: March 26th, 2024, 5:20 pm
ClownLoach wrote: March 26th, 2024, 4:35 pm They have made it clear they will consolidate as opportunities come along. As stated earlier they are negotiating to finalize plans for consolidation in Mission Viejo where the women's building will be replaced by luxury apartments. If they own the building there is no benefit to consolidation without replacement tenants since the stores are all cash flow positive. But they have already stated on investor calls that wherever you see two in a mall, except for flagship properties (South Coast Plaza for example), they are open to taking offers.

And the rest isn't an official list but rather a speculative list. So Santa Maria is probably owned and cash positive, and I would imagine zero chances the property is going anywhere. Lots of population growth to feed comp sales, but lots of bare dirt to build on for decades before anyone thinks of redevelopment of the mall. So oddly enough I could see Santa Maria slipping through. If it's cash positive, comp positive, not high shrink, and zero chance of anyone buying it or subleasing it then zero reason to close it. A lot of big box retail went up there in the last 5 years or so, upsized Costco and Lowe's, Dicks, and others.
I'd expect it is more likely they'll receive offers on one of the flagship secondary stores, like the South Coast Plaza men's store or Valley Fair's men's and home store, before some of the other secondary stores go away. And for those curious, the company does publish a list of stores with their respective land status (owned/leased/ground leased) on their investor website, if you want to peek: (https://www.macysinc.com/investors/fina ... fault.aspx).

As for the speculative aspect of the list, I still think it's 90% spot-on. I'm assuming they won't start shuttering stores until after the holidays, but I assume the picture will become clearer as they look to offload whatever real estate they own.
South Coast Plaza men's store was completely remodeled from top to bottom not long ago and is a top performer that has been fully integrated into the regular store via a sky bridge that links the two buildings at the 3rd floor. The men's business is still so strong that they actually have the men's overflowing into the main building with suits there in probably the only full service, fully staffed dedicated department I've seen left at Macy's with sales people who have been there decades.

The entire SCP three store complex is basically the new flagship of the West Coast. Also the management of SCP bought back the Sears building over a decade ago which was the top grossing store at Sears at the time and was actually very profitable. When it closed it still had ample appliances and TVs and such, that closing probably gave a small cash boost to Sears but was truly the beginning of the end as their death spiral began at that moment. They still have not been able to sublease or do anything with it, and basically have eaten a $200 million purchase. So there's about dead zero chance of anything happening with the Macy's building because the decade long closed Sears facility in a great location effectively devalues any other department store box there. Macy's Inc via the Bloomingdales division has heavily invested into SCP and has created an incredibly successful food court of primarily Asian restaurants inside that building and I expect they will duplicate the concept with the Macy's building.

As far as "trying to offload the real estate they own" I do not see that being the long term strategy of the current management. Such strategies will be the end of the company. It is apparent that they are recipients of investments from the major mall owners as they have been unusually resistant to the concept other than occasionally throwing the agitants a bone like closing Union Square which at this time is a declining asset. But the stripping of all assets is a strategic move for the liquidation of the company and they do not seem to wish to do that. Remember that although they have these agitants and activists who want to see the books because they think they can pillage the company, that doesn't mean they won't like what they find. Owning assets means they have leverage available, they can borrow money as needed and have the large credit lines necessary for their highly seasonal businesses and they secure them with these assets. Retailers like Macy's in stagnant sectors that have tried to unload assets wind up being unable to find enough credit to actually grow their business and then they implode. I cannot imagine that management hasn't built what amount to poison pills by securing credit operations to these properties. There is not a snowballs chance in Hell that there is no loan or other line attached to Herald Square for example, something is secured to it and that would be a deterrent to the vultures.

I have not had the time to dig through the link but I expect it will contain a similar arrangement of other retailers with combination of leased and owned and leased-back. The "crown jewels" will be owned. Most of what is good volume surprisingly will be leased or have undergone a leaseback already. And the rest of the owned will be the lower end of the volume spectrum in "low B and C tier malls" which would deliver minimal returns if sold and become unprofitable instantaneously if leased back. The vultures waiting at the door just want the crown jewels and they want them now because they anticipate a major downtown in the commercial real estate market and know that they probably can't get a higher return on their sale than right now, ongoing store business be damned.

Macy's is unusual in that they still attract good traffic and in their current form they do make money. They have neglected the entire company under the previous leaders by allowing the mall industry to steer their course as they have closed hundreds of stores mainly to get out of the path of the wrecking ball, bulldozer or in some cases board up crew. It sounds like the new management actually gives a damn about the business, that they have a track record that built a playbook for success on the Bloomingdales side and they want to apply that playbook to the Macy's brand. The outside activist vultures obviously are very upset as the last thing they want to see is any investment, any improvement, any new life breathed into Macy's. They want to come in instead and gut the company in a matter of days, making off with the billions in real estate assets they have spent the last century acquiring then forcing them into leasebacks on what will be dead and dying properties which will doom the entire enterprise and have it in bankruptcy within a couple years.
babs
Assistant Store Manager
Assistant Store Manager
Posts: 784
Joined: December 20th, 2016, 3:08 pm
Has thanked: 19 times
Been thanked: 73 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by babs »

I went to the Streets of Tanasbourne store yesterday. Some observations...it's a two-level store in a lifestyle center that is already set up for a Macy's smaller format store. About half of the top floor is furniture. About a 1/3 of the first floor is the disorganized mess better known as Backstage. They had very little Last Call merchandise, which is good. The shoe department is all self-service, which I had not seen before at a Macy's and looked more like a Kohls. Men's shoes was limited to dress shoes only, no athletic shoes. The entire store was pretty spread out with lots of underused floor space. You can get a lot more merch into this store.

This store is a great example of consolidating everything on to the first floor. Eliminate furniture and move Backstage into a freestanding store closer to the Ross or TJ Maxxes in the area for cross-shopping. Since I believe they own the building, monetize the top floor by renting it out to Dave and Busters or similar that don't need a first floor entrance. By doing this, I think they could hold on to much of their sales, monetize unused space, and probably provide a better shopping experience. This is what I would do if I ran the company instead of closing hundreds of stores, better utilize what you have instead of circling the drain.
ClownLoach
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor
Posts: 2991
Joined: April 4th, 2016, 10:55 pm
Has thanked: 50 times
Been thanked: 309 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by ClownLoach »

babs wrote: March 29th, 2024, 9:37 am I went to the Streets of Tanasbourne store yesterday. Some observations...it's a two-level store in a lifestyle center that is already set up for a Macy's smaller format store. About half of the top floor is furniture. About a 1/3 of the first floor is the disorganized mess better known as Backstage. They had very little Last Call merchandise, which is good. The shoe department is all self-service, which I had not seen before at a Macy's and looked more like a Kohls. Men's shoes was limited to dress shoes only, no athletic shoes. The entire store was pretty spread out with lots of underused floor space. You can get a lot more merch into this store.

This store is a great example of consolidating everything on to the first floor. Eliminate furniture and move Backstage into a freestanding store closer to the Ross or TJ Maxxes in the area for cross-shopping. Since I believe they own the building, monetize the top floor by renting it out to Dave and Busters or similar that don't need a first floor entrance. By doing this, I think they could hold on to much of their sales, monetize unused space, and probably provide a better shopping experience. This is what I would do if I ran the company instead of closing hundreds of stores, better utilize what you have instead of circling the drain.
I think the real key is to remodel the dinosaur stores. Allegedly 40% or more of the square footage is not customer space, dozens of offices that sit empty and large stock rooms for every department. Mothballed equipment rooms and cafeterias. Clear all that dead space out and most stores could consolidate to a single floor without cutting a single SKU. Two store malls could drop to one and it would feel substantially larger to the customer. Then they could sublease and make big money. I suspect this is the "bold new chapter" strategy anyway.
pseudo3d
Posts: 3897
Joined: November 12th, 2015, 7:01 pm
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 81 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by pseudo3d »

ClownLoach wrote: March 29th, 2024, 4:08 pm
babs wrote: March 29th, 2024, 9:37 am I went to the Streets of Tanasbourne store yesterday. Some observations...it's a two-level store in a lifestyle center that is already set up for a Macy's smaller format store. About half of the top floor is furniture. About a 1/3 of the first floor is the disorganized mess better known as Backstage. They had very little Last Call merchandise, which is good. The shoe department is all self-service, which I had not seen before at a Macy's and looked more like a Kohls. Men's shoes was limited to dress shoes only, no athletic shoes. The entire store was pretty spread out with lots of underused floor space. You can get a lot more merch into this store.

This store is a great example of consolidating everything on to the first floor. Eliminate furniture and move Backstage into a freestanding store closer to the Ross or TJ Maxxes in the area for cross-shopping. Since I believe they own the building, monetize the top floor by renting it out to Dave and Busters or similar that don't need a first floor entrance. By doing this, I think they could hold on to much of their sales, monetize unused space, and probably provide a better shopping experience. This is what I would do if I ran the company instead of closing hundreds of stores, better utilize what you have instead of circling the drain.
I think the real key is to remodel the dinosaur stores. Allegedly 40% or more of the square footage is not customer space, dozens of offices that sit empty and large stock rooms for every department. Mothballed equipment rooms and cafeterias. Clear all that dead space out and most stores could consolidate to a single floor without cutting a single SKU. Two store malls could drop to one and it would feel substantially larger to the customer. Then they could sublease and make big money. I suspect this is the "bold new chapter" strategy anyway.
Subleasing empty boxes may work but with the number of anchor tenants (especially traditional ones) dwindling by the year--the few growing strip mall retailers are few and far between (Five Below being one), what's to sublease?

They need to develop more brands. They did enormous damage to the Macy's brand by putting in a bunch of department stores in loser malls that were at the end of their life, cleared most of those out, and now they're playing around with (to borrow a phrase from HHR commenter Anonymous in Houston) "Downmarket by Macy's". Something similar to Sears in merchandise mix and price point could be a real winner if they play their cards right and excite investors.
jamcool
Store Manager
Store Manager
Posts: 1034
Joined: March 5th, 2009, 10:27 pm
Been thanked: 53 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by jamcool »

Bring back Supre-Macy?
storewanderer
Posts: 14713
Joined: February 23rd, 2009, 3:54 pm
Has thanked: 3 times
Been thanked: 328 times
Contact:
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by storewanderer »

Maybe once they close enough stores they can merge with Kohls then start closing those.

It is nice to say you will close all the B and lower stores and just have these premium stores you'll "invest" in but then things happen. Markets change around your premium stores, you lose leases, economies go bad, etc.

My opinion is if they go forward with the closure list that was posted here based on the low sales per square foot they are closing too many stores.
veteran+
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor
Posts: 2294
Joined: January 3rd, 2015, 7:53 am
Has thanked: 1361 times
Been thanked: 79 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by veteran+ »

pseudo3d wrote: March 29th, 2024, 4:25 pm
ClownLoach wrote: March 29th, 2024, 4:08 pm
babs wrote: March 29th, 2024, 9:37 am I went to the Streets of Tanasbourne store yesterday. Some observations...it's a two-level store in a lifestyle center that is already set up for a Macy's smaller format store. About half of the top floor is furniture. About a 1/3 of the first floor is the disorganized mess better known as Backstage. They had very little Last Call merchandise, which is good. The shoe department is all self-service, which I had not seen before at a Macy's and looked more like a Kohls. Men's shoes was limited to dress shoes only, no athletic shoes. The entire store was pretty spread out with lots of underused floor space. You can get a lot more merch into this store.

This store is a great example of consolidating everything on to the first floor. Eliminate furniture and move Backstage into a freestanding store closer to the Ross or TJ Maxxes in the area for cross-shopping. Since I believe they own the building, monetize the top floor by renting it out to Dave and Busters or similar that don't need a first floor entrance. By doing this, I think they could hold on to much of their sales, monetize unused space, and probably provide a better shopping experience. This is what I would do if I ran the company instead of closing hundreds of stores, better utilize what you have instead of circling the drain.
I think the real key is to remodel the dinosaur stores. Allegedly 40% or more of the square footage is not customer space, dozens of offices that sit empty and large stock rooms for every department. Mothballed equipment rooms and cafeterias. Clear all that dead space out and most stores could consolidate to a single floor without cutting a single SKU. Two store malls could drop to one and it would feel substantially larger to the customer. Then they could sublease and make big money. I suspect this is the "bold new chapter" strategy anyway.
Subleasing empty boxes may work but with the number of anchor tenants (especially traditional ones) dwindling by the year--the few growing strip mall retailers are few and far between (Five Below being one), what's to sublease?

They need to develop more brands. They did enormous damage to the Macy's brand by putting in a bunch of department stores in loser malls that were at the end of their life, cleared most of those out, and now they're playing around with (to borrow a phrase from HHR commenter Anonymous in Houston) "Downmarket by Macy's". Something similar to Sears in merchandise mix and price point could be a real winner if they play their cards right and excite investors.
Yup, that is what Macy's has been doing for a long time via their merger and acquisition frenzy........................downmarketing "Macy's".

Macy's meant something different at its peak and it was not Gimbles or MayCo or Kohls or JC Penney's. It also was not Sak's or Blomingdale's or Neiman Marcus.
storewanderer
Posts: 14713
Joined: February 23rd, 2009, 3:54 pm
Has thanked: 3 times
Been thanked: 328 times
Contact:
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by storewanderer »

veteran+ wrote: March 30th, 2024, 8:27 am
pseudo3d wrote: March 29th, 2024, 4:25 pm
ClownLoach wrote: March 29th, 2024, 4:08 pm

I think the real key is to remodel the dinosaur stores. Allegedly 40% or more of the square footage is not customer space, dozens of offices that sit empty and large stock rooms for every department. Mothballed equipment rooms and cafeterias. Clear all that dead space out and most stores could consolidate to a single floor without cutting a single SKU. Two store malls could drop to one and it would feel substantially larger to the customer. Then they could sublease and make big money. I suspect this is the "bold new chapter" strategy anyway.
Subleasing empty boxes may work but with the number of anchor tenants (especially traditional ones) dwindling by the year--the few growing strip mall retailers are few and far between (Five Below being one), what's to sublease?

They need to develop more brands. They did enormous damage to the Macy's brand by putting in a bunch of department stores in loser malls that were at the end of their life, cleared most of those out, and now they're playing around with (to borrow a phrase from HHR commenter Anonymous in Houston) "Downmarket by Macy's". Something similar to Sears in merchandise mix and price point could be a real winner if they play their cards right and excite investors.
Yup, that is what Macy's has been doing for a long time via their merger and acquisition frenzy........................downmarketing "Macy's".

Macy's meant something different at its peak and it was not Gimbles or MayCo or Kohls or JC Penney's. It also was not Sak's or Blomingdale's or Neiman Marcus.
That "different" Macy's is gone. It went away when they took in May (which was in my opinion a mistake). Maybe the CHH (Emporium, Broadway, Weinstocks, etc.) merger was okay for Macys back in the 90's. The Macys West operation especially in CA kept the "a little better" store idea going a little longer than the rest of Macys (and that was run by that Jeff Gennette when it was restructured away, who just retired as CEO) but once they got restructured out of existence in one of the annual Macys restructuring process that was the end of that.

All these mergers along with the many regional chain bankruptcies basically ruined the department store business... I think a lot of these chains doomed themselves financially through bad financial arrangements. Then you have Sears; decades of arrogance followed by the slow ongoing liquidation...

I hate to say it but I kind of see the Macys path similar to Sears. It keeps shrinking. It keeps monetizing real estate. It keeps having a "new strategy" EVERY YEAR when it restructures which it seems to do like clockwork every year...
ClownLoach
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor
Posts: 2991
Joined: April 4th, 2016, 10:55 pm
Has thanked: 50 times
Been thanked: 309 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by ClownLoach »

storewanderer wrote: March 30th, 2024, 10:12 am
veteran+ wrote: March 30th, 2024, 8:27 am
pseudo3d wrote: March 29th, 2024, 4:25 pm

Subleasing empty boxes may work but with the number of anchor tenants (especially traditional ones) dwindling by the year--the few growing strip mall retailers are few and far between (Five Below being one), what's to sublease?

They need to develop more brands. They did enormous damage to the Macy's brand by putting in a bunch of department stores in loser malls that were at the end of their life, cleared most of those out, and now they're playing around with (to borrow a phrase from HHR commenter Anonymous in Houston) "Downmarket by Macy's". Something similar to Sears in merchandise mix and price point could be a real winner if they play their cards right and excite investors.
Yup, that is what Macy's has been doing for a long time via their merger and acquisition frenzy........................downmarketing "Macy's".

Macy's meant something different at its peak and it was not Gimbles or MayCo or Kohls or JC Penney's. It also was not Sak's or Blomingdale's or Neiman Marcus.
That "different" Macy's is gone. It went away when they took in May (which was in my opinion a mistake). Maybe the CHH (Emporium, Broadway, Weinstocks, etc.) merger was okay for Macys back in the 90's. The Macys West operation especially in CA kept the "a little better" store idea going a little longer than the rest of Macys (and that was run by that Jeff Gennette when it was restructured away, who just retired as CEO) but once they got restructured out of existence in one of the annual Macys restructuring process that was the end of that.

All these mergers along with the many regional chain bankruptcies basically ruined the department store business... I think a lot of these chains doomed themselves financially through bad financial arrangements. Then you have Sears; decades of arrogance followed by the slow ongoing liquidation...

I hate to say it but I kind of see the Macys path similar to Sears. It keeps shrinking. It keeps monetizing real estate. It keeps having a "new strategy" EVERY YEAR when it restructures which it seems to do like clockwork every year...
I don't think they've had a new strategy or restructuring every year. They ran the Polaris strategy the last 4 years and it worked well, they eliminated every unprofitable store as well as eliminated the unproductive piles of inventory that used to clog the aisles. What they couldn't do is stem the tide of closing malls forcing their hand, and now with "bold chapter" they're trying to get ahead of the inevitable and close where they otherwise would be closed after incurring lost sales as the mall goes down. That alone should be very helpful to comp sales and get the Wall Street vultures off their backs.

Their biggest issue is and will continue to be the merchandise. They need to give people a reason to drive to the mall, which is becoming further away for most Americans as smaller ones die. They can't just use discounts, coupons, clearance blowouts, and credit cards as reasons as they did in the past. They need to find a sustainable solution. It sounds like Bloomingdales may have figured that out at the higher end as it's obviously outperforming the deteriorating Nordstrom and Saks, so they need to share the secrets with Macy's and see if the formula works there.

That weird Market department with oddball curated buys has been gone for some time, I feel like the last time I saw it was Pre pandemic.

Also Sears abandoned their best locations first because they would deliver the highest return when sold. Macy's is not doing that. Sears sold and closed the highest volume and most profitable store in their company because they needed the cash to prop up the others. Macy's is doing the opposite and fighting to keep Herald Square.
FrankMoore99
Stock Clerk
Stock Clerk
Posts: 34
Joined: March 27th, 2024, 10:39 am
Been thanked: 10 times
Status: Offline

Re: Macys Stores Closing by 2026

Post by FrankMoore99 »

Here are three Macy's potential closures lists. Which of these stores do you think they will close?? What stores on this list are not featured on all three??

Macy’s Potential Closures (Frank Moore's list):https://www.thelayoff.com/macy-s#google_vignette
SanTan (Gilbert) Arizona
364 Capitola California
386 West Valley Mall (Tracy) California
Union Square (San Francisco) California
Northgate (San Rafael) California
Coddingtown (Santa Rosa) California
Newpark (Newark) California
410 Sunrise (Citrus Heights) California
RiverPark (Fresno) California
Redding California
Westminster Mall California
555 Otay Ranch Town Center (Chula Vista) California
355 Northfield Stapleton Colorado
Orchards (Westminster) Colorado
Aurora Colorado
51 Trumbull Connecticut
162 Concord (Wilmington) Delaware
Boynton Beach Florida
Ocala Florida
Merritt Island Florida
Siesta Key (Sarasota) Florida
778 Southland (Cutler Bay) Florida
813 Orlando Fashion Square Florida
Citrus Park (Tampa) Florida
Tryone Square (St Petersburg) Florida
Arbor Place (Douglasville) Georgia
736 Oglethorpe (Savannah) Georgia
Northlake Mall (Atlanta) Georgia
734 Gwinnett Place (Duluth) Georgia
Peachtree (Columbus) Georgia
Stonecrest (Lithonia) Georgia
470 Kahala (Oahu) Hawaii
399 Coeur D'Alene Silver Lake Idaho
Fairview Heights Illinois
River Oaks (Calumet City) Illinois
Springfield Illinois
Champaign Illinois
Gurnee Mills Illinois
279 Cherryvale (Rockford) Illinois
280 Louis Joliet (Joliet) Illinois
Lafayette Indiana
692 Acadiana (Lafayette) Louisiana
Marley Station (Glen Burnie) Maryland
Fancis Scott Key (Frederick) Maryland
Bel Air Maryland
Bowie Maryland
159 Security Square (Baltimore) Maryland
179 Independence (Kingston) Massachusetts
Hanover Massachusetts
Emerald Square (North Attleboro) Massachusetts
308 Genesee Valley Center (Flint) Michigan
319 Grand Traverse (Traverse City) Michigan
Fairlane (Dearborn) Michigan
Portage Michigan
315 Fashion Square (Saginaw) Michigan
Oakland (Troy) Michigan
243 Crossroads Center (St Cloud) Minnesota
235 Burnsville Center (Burnsville) Minnesota
612 Battlefield (Springfield) Missouri
611 Metro North (Kansas City) Missouri
Mid Rivers (St Peters) Missouri
655 South County (St Louis) Missouri
Bozeman Montana
46 Mall at Fox Run (Newington) New Hampshire
Monmouth Mall (Eatontown) New Jersey
Mays Landing New Jersey
88 Brunswick Square (East Brunswick) New Jersey
Livingston New Jersey
171 Hampton Bays New York
22 Parkchester (Bronx) New York
Sunrise Mall (Massapequa) New York
Jefferson Valley New York
Boulevard Mall (Amherst) New York
Triangle Town Center (Raleigh) North Carolina
Northlake (Charlotte) North Carolina
Eastwood (Niles) Ohio
Beavercreek Ohio
568 Anderson Town Center (Cincinnati) Ohio
383 Bend River (OR) Oregon
Salem Oregon
388 Tanasbourne Streets (Hillsboro) Oregon
Westmoreland Mall (Greensburg) Pennsylvania
Oxford Valley Pennsylvania
Montgomery Pennsylvania
589 Galleria At Pittsburgh Mills (Tarentum) Pennsylvania
151 Exton Square Pennsylvania
626 Logan Valley (Altoona) Pennsylvania
637 Wyoming Valley (Wilkes-Barre) Pennsylvania
789 Columbia (SC) South Carolina
241 Empire (Sioux Falls) South Dakota
Oak Court (Memphis) Tennessee
682 Irving Texas
708 La Palmera (Corpus Christi) Texas
Ingram Park (San Antonio) Texas
Almeda (Houston) Texas
Lakeline (Cedar Park) Texas
Greenbriar (Chesapeake) Virginia
Colonial Heights Virginia
Manassas Virginia
373 Silverdale Kitsap Washington
438 Puyallup South Hill Washington
Wenatchee Washington
Bellingham Washington
Vancouver Washington
Yakima Washington
262 Southridge (Greenfield) Wisconsin

Macy’s Potential Closures (list from someone from the Layoff. a comment on this post): https://www.thelayoff.com/macy-s#google_vignette
HOOVER AL Alabama
MESA AZ Arizona
TUCSON AZ Arizona
STOCKTON CA California
SAN RAFAEL CA California
TRACY CA California
REDDING CA California
VISALIA CA California
CAPITOLA CA California
VICTORVILLE CA California
SAN FRANCISCO CA - UNION SQUARE California
CHULA VISTA CA California
WESTMINSTER CA California
DENVER CO - NORTFIELD Colorado
WILMINGTON DE Delaware
WESLEY CHAPEL FL Florida
SARASOTA FL - SIESTA Florida
ORLANDO FL - FASHION SQUARE Florida
OCALA FL Florida
BOYNTON BEACH FL Florida
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS FL Florida
MELBOURNE FL Florida
ST PETERSBURG FL Florida
CUTLER BAY FL Florida
COLUMBUS GA Georgia
DOUGLASVILLE GA Georgia
ATLANTA GA - NORTHLAKE Georgia
SAVANNAH GA Georgia
DULUTH GA Georgia
KAILUA KONA HI Hawaii
HILO HI Hawaii
KAHULUI HI Hawaii
HONOLULU HI - KAHALA Hawaii
HONOLULU HI - WAIKIKI Hawaii
KAPOLEI HI Hawaii
COEUR D ALENE ID Idaho
JOLIET IL Illinois
CHAMPAIGN IL Illinois
FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS IL Illinois
VERNON HILLS IL Illinois
SPRINGFIELD IL Illinois
CALUMET CITY IL Illinois
ROCKFORD IL Illinois
EVANSVILLE IN Indiana
LAFAYETTE IN Indiana
LAFAYETTE LA Louisiana
BALTIMORE MD Maryland
GLEN BURNIE MD Maryland
BEL AIR MD Maryland
DORCHESTER MA (Just opened, so I am confused why this is on this list, since it is not closing to my knowledge since it is the new Macy's format) Massachusetts
HANOVER MA Massachusetts
KINGSTON MA Massachusetts
SAGINAW MI Michigan
OKEMOS MI Michigan
PORTAGE MI Michigan
FLINT MI Michigan
MAPLEWOOD MN Minnesota
BURNSVILLE MN Minnesota
SAINT LOUIS MO - SOUTH COUNTY Missouri
SAINT PETERS MO Missouri
SPRINGFIELD MO Missouri
KANSAS CITY MO - METRO NORTH Missouri
BOZEMAN MT Montana
LAS VEGAS NV - MEADOWS Nevada
NEWINGTON NH New Hampshire
TOMS RIVER NJ New Jersey
EAST BRUNSWICK NJ New Jersey
LIVINGSTON NJ New Jersey
YORKTOWN HEIGHTS NY New York
BRONX NY-PARKCHESTER New York
CHARLOTTE NC - NORTHLAKE North Carolina
GREENSBORO NC North Carolina
FAYETTEVILLE NC North Carolina
RALEIGH NC - TRIANGLE TC North Carolina
NILES OH Ohio
UNI HEIGHTS OH Ohio
STRONGSVILLE OH Ohio
BEAVERCREEK OH Ohio
CENTERVILLE OH Ohio
CINCINNATI OH - ANDERSON Ohio
TOLEDO OH Ohio
CANTON OH Ohio
TULSA OK Oklahoma
HILLSBORO OR Oregon
BEND OR Oregon
EXTON PA Pennsylvania
TARENTUM PA Pennsylvania
LANGHORNE PA Pennsylvania
COLUMBIA SC South Carolina
SIOUX FALLS SD South Dakota
FRANKLIN TN Tennessee
IRVING TX Texas
PLANO TX Texas
FAIRVIEW TX Texas
CEDAR PARK TX Texas
SAN ANTONIO TX - INGRAM PARK Texas
SAN ANTONIO TX - SOUTH PARK Texas
HOUSTON TX - ALMEDA Texas
AUSTIN TX - BARTON CREEK Texas
PEARLAND TX Texas
CORPUS CHRISTI TX Texas
SALT LAKE CITY UT - CITY CREEK Utah
ROANOKE VA Virginia
FREDERICKSBURG VA Virginia
SILVERDALE WA Washington
PUYALLUP WA Washington
OLYMPIA WA Washington
BELLINGHAM WA Washington
EAST WENATCHEE WA Washington
GREENDALE WI Wisconsin
APPLETON WI Wisconsin

Macy's Potential Closures (from The Big Small): This list
Superstition Springs Center, Mesa, AZ Arizona
Capitola Mall, Capitola, CA California
Otay Ranch Towne Center, Chula Vista, CA California
Sunrise Mall, Citrus Heights, CA California
Shops at River Park, Frenso, CA California
Grassmont Center, La Mesa, CA California
Moreno Valley Mall, Moreno Valley, CA California
Newpark Mall, Newark, CA California
Mt. Shasta Mall, Redding, CA California
Union Square, San Francisco, CA California
Northgate Mall, San Rafael, CA California
Coddingtown Mall, Santa Rosa, CA California
Sherwood Place, Stockton, CA California
West Valley Mall, Tracy, CA California
Pacific View Mall, Ventura, CA California
The Mall at Victor Valley, Victorville, CA California
Visalia Mall, Visalia, CA California
Westminster Mall, Westminster, CA California
Stamford Towne Center, Stamford, CT Connecticut
Trumbull Mall, Trumbull, CT Connecticut
Chapel Hills Mall, Colorado Springs, CO Colorado
The Shops at Northfield Stapleton, Denver, CO Colorado
Orchard Towne Center, Westminster, CO Colorado
Concord Mall, Wilmington, DE Delaware
Boynton Beach Mall, Boynton Beach, FL Florida
Southland Mall, Cutler Bay, FL Florida
Melbourne Square, Melbourne, FL Florida
Merritt Square Mall, Merritt, FL Florida
Coastland Center, Naples, FL Florida
Paddock Mall, Ocala, FL Florida
Orlando Fashion Square, Orlando, FL Florida
Crossing at Siesta Key, Sarasota, FL Florida
Westshore Plaza, Tampa Bay, FL Florida
Northlake Mall, Atlanta, GA Georgia
Peachtree Mall, Columbus, GA Georgia
Arbor Place, Douglasville, GA Georgia
Gwinnett Place Mall, Duluth, GA Georgia
Oglethorpe Mall, Savannah, GA Georgia
Prince Kuhio Plaza, Hilo, HI Hawaii
Kahala Mall, Honolulu, HI Hawaii
Queen Kaahumanu Center, Kahului, HI Hawaii
Makalapua Center, Kailua-Kona, HI Hawaii
Silver Lake Mall, Coeur D Alene, ID Idaho
River Oaks Center, Calumet City, IL Illinois
Market Place Shopping Center, Champaign, IL Illinois
Louis Joliet Mall, Joliet, IL Illinois
Cherryvale, Rockford, IL Illinois
White Oaks Mall, Springfield, IL Illinois
Hawthorn Center, Vernon Hills, IL Illinois
Eastland Mall, Evansville, IN Indiana
Tippecanoe Mall, Lafayette, IN Indiana
Florence Mall, Florence, KY Kentucky
Acadiana mall, Lafayette, LA Louisiana
Security Square Mall, Baltimore, MD Maryland
Harford Mall, Bel Air, MD Maryland
Bowie Towne Center, Bowie, MD Maryland
Marley Station, Glen Burnie, MD Maryland
Auburn Mall, Auburn, MA Massachusetts
Hanover Crossing, Hanover, MA Massachusetts
Kingston Collection, Kingston, MA Massachusetts
Emerald Square Mall, Attleborough, MA Massachusetts
Fairlane Towne Center, Dearborn, MI Michigan
Genesee Valley Center, Flint, MI Michigan
Lakeside Mall, Sterling Heights, MI Michigan
Meridian Mall, Okemos, MI Michigan
The Crossroads Mall, Portage, MI Michigan
Fashion Square Mall, Sanginaw, MI Michigan
Grand Traverse Mall, Traverse City, MI Michigan
Burnsville Center, Burnsville, MN Minnesota
Maplewood Mall, Maplewood, MN Minnesota
Crossroads Center, St. Cloud, MN Minnesota
Metro North Mall, Kansas City, MO Missouri
South County Center, St. Louis, MO Missouri
Mid Rivers Mall, St. Peters, MO Missouri
Battlefield Mall, Springfield, MO Missouri
Bozeman Gallatin Valley Mall, Bozeman, MT Montana
Mall at Fox Run, Newington, NH New Hampshire
Brunswick Square, East Brunswick, NJ New Jersey
Monmouth Mall, Eatontown, NJ New Jersey
Livingston Mall, Livingston, NJ New Jersey
Hamilton Mall, Mays Landing, NJ New Jersey
Boulevard Mall, Amherst, NY New York
Parkchester, Bronx, NY New York
Hampton Bays Plaza, Hampton Bays, NY New York
Sunrise Mall, Massapueqa, NY New York
Jefferson Valley Mall, Yorktown Heights, NY New York
Northlake Mall, Charlotte, NC North Carolina
Triangle Towne Center, Raleigh, NC North Carolina
Mall at Fairfield Commons, Beavercreek, OH Ohio
Dayton Mall, Centerville, OH Ohio
Anderson Towne Center, Cincinnati, OH Ohio
Tuttle Crossing, Dublin, OH Ohio
Eastwood Mall, Niles, OH Ohio
University Heights Square, University Heights, OH Ohio
Bend River Mall, Bend, OR Oregon
The Streets at Tanasbourne, Hillsboro, OR Oregon
Salem Center, Salem, OR Oregon
Logan Valley Mall, Altoona, PA Pennsylvania
Exton Square Mall, Exton, PA Pennsylvania
Oxford Valley Mall, Langhorne, PA Pennsylvania
Montgomery Mall, North Wales, PA Pennsylvania
Galleria at Pittsburgh Mills, Tarentum, PA Pennsylvania
Wyoming Valley Mall, Wilkes Barre, PA Pennsylvania
Columbia Mall, Columbia, SC South Carolina
Empire Mall, Sioux Falls, SD South Dakota
Oak Court Mall, Memphis, TN Tennessee
Lakeline Mall, Cedar Park, TX Texas
LaPalmera Mall, Corpus Christi, TX Texas
Hulen Mall, Forth Worth, TX Texas
Almeda Mall, Houston, TX Texas
Irving Mall, Irving, TX Texas
Towne East Mall. Mesquite, TX Texas
Shops at Willow Bend, Plano, TX Texas
Ingram Park Mall, San Antonio, TX Texas
South Park Mall, San Antonio, TX Texas
Greenbrier Mall, Chesapeake, VA Virginia
South Park Mall, Colonial Heights, VA Virginia
Valley View Mall, Roanoke, VA Virginia
Bellis Fair, Bellingham, WA Washington
Wenatchee Valley Mall, East Wenatchee, WA Washington
Capital Mall, Olympia, WA Washington
South Hill Mall, Puyallup, WA Washington
Kitsap Mall, Silverdale, WA Washington
Southridge Mall, Greendale, WI Wisconsin
Post Reply