Posts Tagged lifestyle center

The Shoppes at Arbor Lakes: Maple Grove, MN

Shop and eat. Shop and eat. Shop and eat.  Thousands of years from now, anthropologists will study the ruins of the this land

Arbor Lakes

Arbor Lakes

and wonder if all its denizens did was buy shit and stuff their face.  Maple Grove’s retail area is obnoxiously huge — acres and acres of parking lots, big box stores, and pretty much every chain restaurant known to man. Except the Cheesecake Factory. Maple Grove needs a Cheesecake Factory.

Where can one find this shopping district? Why, just hop on I-94 Westbound and let the Great River Energy Wind Turbine guide you to the land of impulse shopping bliss.

There are so many shops and restaurants up in the Grove that if you’re not completely familiar with the area, you can feel very overwhelmed. So many of the shops are hidden in different nooks, crannies, and “pedestrian-friendly” streets that trying to find the Jimmy John’s can potentially waste a tank of gas. I live around in this area, so I do come here often, and I STILL get lost.

Some people say that Maple Grove is a soul-sucking suburb with massive shopping sprawl. It’s suburbia on CRACK — a boring, stagnant, nosey, do-goody, community-based, suburban nightmare. Pretentious hipsters LOVE to rag on this place – it’s “vanilla”, it’s in the suburbs, there are chain stores far as the eyes can see, there’s a fucking TGIFriday’s, etc, etc, etc (but we all know they’re secretly shopping at PacSun and Zumiez when they think no one is looking).

But hey, I’m not afraid to admit it – I like this place. I’ll go here to shop and eat, shop and eat, and shop and eat myself, until I’m Pittsburgh Blue in the face.

That said, Arbor Lakes and the surrounding shopping areas deserve a little mocking. ;)

Enclosed malls are oh-so 20th Century. The new trend is the open-air “lifestyle center” which basically is an enclosed mall but without the pesky amenities that the mall ownership has to provide, like a comfortable indoor temperature, janitors, security on segways, an information desk, etc. Just smear out a shitload of concrete, plant a few undersized trees & wee seedlings, add some parking spaces for the “convenience” and then let Mother Nature be your custodial crew!

According to the Wikipedia entry, construction began in 1998, and was completed in 2003 (5 years seems like an awfully long time to build a shopping area to me, but yep, I can definitely remember it being built in the late ’90s). I imagine this entire area was a big field or gravel pits before construction began.

There are 3 of these separately-named “Lifestyle Center” shopping areas, though they all kind of run into one big massive, sprawling shopping area in my head. It’s tough to distinguish which is which, (and I really don’t think anyone cares!) but this is how *I* break it down.

Main Street Maple Grove : Maple Grove is fucking with your head here. This is that area across Hemlock Lane that looks like downtown in a small, midwestern city. Oh how clever, right? We haven’t seen THAT done before. It’s supposed to make you think you’re in a one-horse town in Central Minnesota. But instead of Rexall Drug and Hardware Hank, there’s a Chico’s and an Ann Taylor Loft, both of which you wouldn’t find in, say, Randall, Minnesota.

This is also where Bylerys and Party City are located, as well as a few restaurants such as Buca and The Claddaugh, (the latter is one of those restaurants that foil you into thinking  you’ve found a unique local hole-in-the-wall, but it’s really a chain). Remember, you’re in Maple Grove, Chain HQ of the Twin Cities Metro Area.

Fountains at Arbor Lakes: This is where REI, Dave & Buster’s, DSW, the old Circuit City, Costco, the Running Room, etc are located. I’m still looking for these “fountains”…perhaps they are talking about the drinking fountains?

Then, there’s The Shoppes at Arbor Lakes, where Dumpy Strip Malls took most of the photos.

First off, MISLEADING NAME. Arbor Lakes? I don’t see a lake (though I’ve heard there *IS* an actual lake up in the ‘Grove named “Arbor”, but I don’t know where this mystery lake is. If it’s near the shopping center, it’s probably more akin to a storm run-off drain than a beautiful freshwater lagoon, but I digress), and there isn’t a whole lot of arbor.  The imposing Maple Grove skyline consists of a lot of sand & gravel foothills, rouge dumptrucks, and gigantic tumbleweeds blowing about. Come here in the summer and you’d swear you were in a Nevada desert anticipating a wild-west shootout, not in a soul-sucking Minneapolis suburb with every chain restaurant known to man.

Every store here is filled with control-freak soccer moms & their SUV-sized strollers or swarms of teens (OMG!!!) shopping at Hollister, blowing up daddy’s credit card. The “shoppes” here are supposed to be “upscale” but I really don’t see anything here that I can’t find at any other generic mall. There’s a Bath & Body Works, Express, Gap, The Buckle, Ulta, J Crew, Hollister, Talbots, Borders (to name a few) — so yeah, your typical mall fare. However, since all of the stores are designed to look like small town “shoppes” with outdoor-facing enterances, AND there is a nearby California Pizza Kitchen and PF Chang’s, it immediately makes stores like Yankee Candle ‘upscale.’  I suppose if Payless Shoes, Fashion Bug, or DEB wanted to set up shop over in the former Sharper Image store, then we’d have problems.

From the outside, the Arbor Lakes area of Maple Grove seems like a happenin’ place, immune to the shitty economy. It’s still a “happenin’” place, but there have been some store closings. A few off the top of my head are -
The Sharper Image
Cost Plus World Market
Some frou-frou Paris Hilton-style pet clothing store
Krispy Kreme (now being turned into a bank)
Joe’s Crab Shack
…and I’m sure there are more.

Local boutiques are few and far between here because the rent is sky-high…I actually know this first-hand. In 2006, I looked into opening a business of my own over in the “Main Street” shopping area. Yeah, not happenin’.

In the summer, this is a great place to shop. Minnesota summers are beautiful, so it’s nice that they made this place pedestrian-friendly and walkable. When the cold hits, it’s a bitch. I don’t care how many cheery, peppy Miley Cyrus/Jonas Brothers songs they pump through the hidden speakers, it isn’t going to cheer me up in -30 degree weather. Shopping at this outdoor mall in Minnesota just isn’t fun in the middle of January, so I’ll usually avoid this place and go to an indoor mall instead to be warm and cozy.

All in all, Arbor Lakes is a very successful retail center – who says decent, thriving retail can’t exist in the north metro?!

All photos taken Feb. 2009

FYI – I apologize for the lack of updates. My computer crashed on me about a month ago, and I lost most of my work, as well as lots of photos I had taken. I bought a new MacBook last week, so I’ll be back posting updates. :)

Information to add? Discuss in the comments!

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Welcome to Arbor Lakes!

UE

Ultimate Electronics...I wonder what the over/under in Vegas is on this place going out of business within the next year?

Granite City

Granite City. Yes, it is a chain. Try their chalupas!

IF YOU LIKE IT THEN YOU SHUDDA PUTTA RING ON IT

IF YOU LIKE IT THEN YOU SHUDDA PUTTA RING ON IT

I can't really explain why, but I've never liked Borders. I'd rather go to Half Price Books or B&N.  Borders reminds me of Media Play. Remember that store?!

I can't really explain why, but I've never liked Borders. I'd rather go to Half Price Books or B&N. Borders reminds me of Media Play. Remember that store?!

The only good thing Houlihan's has going for it is their HUGE Long Island Iced Teas.

Wanna get shit-faced up in the Grove? Houlihan's has HUGE Long Island Iced Teas that will knock you out cold.

I took a picture of this because I really want that cute pink pineapple candle

I took a picture of this because I really want that cute pink pineapple candle

The Shoppes at Arbor Lakes

A few of the Shoppes, including The Buckle, a typical overpriced midwestern mall store.

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Le Gourmet Chef is just one of the yuppie-targeted stores

Arbor Lakes

Note to FASHION-FORWARD ladies - Arbor Lakes has a Coldwater Creek!

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Christmas lights? STILL? This photo was taken a good 2 months after the holiday

Express

What this place needs is more chain stores and restaurants.

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"Inside" of Arbor Lakes

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Don't test too many of these scents on your skin at the same time. I did this once, and I walked out of Bath & Body Works smelling like a burning computer.

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Speaking of burning, the Ulta store smells like melting makeup

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A sale like this would make our founding fathers PROUD.

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J CRACK, my favorite store.

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Another view of Arbor Lakes

Sad thing is, I kind of like it. I would totally wear something like this.

Ugly cardigan @ Express. Sad thing is, I kind of like it. I would totally wear something like this.

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Silver Lake Village (former Apache Plaza location): St. Anthony, MN

St Anthony

This is what Apache Plaza has been turned into - a "trendy" lifestyle center

I’m not going to write a post about Apache Plaza – yes, it’s definitely an important part of Minnesota mall lore, but the deed’s been done so much better than I could ever do over at ApachePlaza.com. However, that site only provides information up until the demolition of the mall. So I’ll take it from there & show you what’s happened to the area after Apache met its fatal fate in the spring of 2004.

At some point around 2005, up went condos (*rolling eyes*), a Wal-Mart, and a smattering of typical strip mall businesses linked together by a sidewalk, which I guess is supposed to make this place  a “Lifestyle Center”.  Calling Silver Lake Village a “lifestyle center” is a bit of a stretch. Arbor Lakes in Maple Grove, now that’s a Lifestyle Center. This hodgepodge in St. Anthony, not so much. There’s no Anthropologie or American Eagle here; the businesses in Silver Lake Village are more of the Papa Murphy’s/GNC/Nail Salon type — day-to-day type businesses put here to meet the needs of the local residents, not shopping destination stores.

Even though there are plenty of barren spaces that have stood empty since the day this center was built, I definitely wouldn’t call this place a failure.  Silver Lake Village always seems to be fairly busy — much busier than Apache Plaza was in its last 10 years. Before this area was rebuilt, a lot of people in the area were skeptical if another retail development would work in this area. So far, so good. St. Anthony is NOT the retail Bermuda Triangle that some thought it was. The Wal-Mart’s always packed, Cub Foods has always been busy, and in the summertime, the sidewalks are usually pretty hoppin’.  Which I can’t quite comprehend. This commercial complex is not a place where you’d want to blow your whole afternoon, yet people wander the sidewalks here in the summer like it’s some sort of unique marketplace. The businesses here are not of the window-shopping genre, like the Shoppes at Arbor Lakes are. Most of the businesses here are service-orientated – the only actual stores here are GNC, a liquor store, a GameStop, and a cell phone store. Really, who window shops at GNC? For that matter, who SHOPS at GNC? I never see anyone in there & their prices are outrageous. I can buy energy bars and tubs of Myoplex shake mix cheaper online.

The nearby condos for sale promote this area as a “walkable community” and I

Condos

Are you fucking kidding me? There are CONDOS for sale? In THIS thriving economy? Color me shocked!

guess technically, it is. If you lived in one of the condos — and there are PLENTY still available to rent or buy — you technically could walk to Gamestop if you so desired.

There’s an open field with a small amphitheater near the back of the lifestyle center, close to the condos, that’s supposed to be some sort of a park. There’s a small man-made body of water that looks more like a runoff basin than a picturesque pond.  But it’s winter, so naturally it won’t look very attractive right now. To St. Anthony’s credit, this is still a newer development, and it does have decent sidewalk traffic in the summer, so it might still cultivate into the vision that its developer originally intended.

The main draw of this area is the Cub Foods and the Wal-Mart.

Wal-Mart: This is actually a decent Wal-Mart, relatively speaking. I’m a Target girl myself, and will avoid Wally World with all my might, but sometimes it’s the only Big Box open. So if I have to go to Wal-Mart, I shop here. Conveniently, this particular location happens to be right by my house (the next closest Wal-Mart is the Fridley store and that store

Cub, St. Anthony

Cub, St. Anthony

tore, my friends, is the be-it-all, end-all of Wal-Mart Freak Shows). You’ll find fewer toothless yokels here, but don’t worry – the St. Anthony Wal-Mart won’t completely let you down. You’re still bound to bump your cart into at least one 400lb woman’s fupa per visit and you’ll still see a fleet of rusted out 1990 Pontiac Firebirds in the parking lot.

Cub Foods: I like Cub much better than Rainbow, but I do most of my grocery shopping at Super Target, Trader

Joe’s, or Kowalski’s.

What’s in the “Lifestyle Center”?

One thing that bugs me about the businesses in this center is that they have 2 entrances – one on each side of the building. I never know which way is the front of the store and which way is the back. I suppose it doesn’t matter. I just feel awkward when I walk into a store and it feels like I entered from the back …that’s what she said.

Cold Stone Creamery: <sigh> It’s hard to believe that a new ice cream chain

Cold Stone

Cold Stone is delicious and all, but really, for the price of a "Gotta Have It", you could've made your own GALLON-sized creation at home with a bucket of Kemps and a bag of fun-sized Butterfingers.

popped up here in the 21st century and became so popular! Aren’t we all supposed to be eating Dippin’ Dots by now? ;)

Papa Murphy’s: For as horrible of a cook I am, I can somehow manage NOT to burn a Papa Murphy’s pizza in my oven. They must somehow fool-proof these suckers, because knowing me, I’m quite surprised I haven’t screwed up a Papa Murphy’s Take-N-Bake by now.

Caribou Coffee: I love delicious foo-foo nonsense coffee drinks. Therefore, I love Caribou Coffee. It’s so rustic with the log tables, elk decor, and the roaring fireplace. I feel like I’ve arrived in Alaska without ever stepping foot on a plane.  No, I’m not being sarcastic, I really do love coffee shops and expensive coffee drinks. I get a large skim sugar-free hazelnut Northern Lite double-shot extra froth latte every morning. It’s quite delightful, really.  Why do people get all up in arms about folks who go to these coffee places & order a $4 drink? These pissy people are the same ones who have no problem going out to the bar after work and running up a huge tab on pricey margaritas. Why the hate on coffee?

Inside Caribou Coffee

Inside the St. Anthony Caribou Coffee. Take a look at their menu board - it'll take you 10 minutes just to find the price of a REGULAR cup of coffee. (July 2008)

Sure…yeah, I know — people bought it in a tin can for many decades paying pennies on the dollar and thought it was great & all, but this is 2009 and I am physically unable to survive my day unless I’m paying at least $4 for my morning cup of joe. :)

I tend to prefer Caribou to Starbucks. I can go to Costco and buy $50 in Caribou gift cards for $40, so I’m saving 10 bucks right there.  Plus, Starbucks isn’t really convenient for me as the only one by my house is the little counter in the SuperTarget so they’re not open when I leave for work. Also note that there’s FREE WIRELESS in Caribou. Starbucks makes you jump through hoops to get on their WIFI, by going through T-Moblie or some shit. And I don’t think it’s free. What’s the point of sitting at a coffee shop without the free WiFi?

I love the snob coffee scene and I enjoy being hip at 6:45AM.  Hell, I know someone who started drinking coffee just so she could go to Caribou and look “cool” drinking coffee. I love premium coffee milkshake drinks, so suck it, haters – I’m living la vida mocha!

Applebee’s: I’m not a restaurant snob – I don’t mind eating at chains. Let’s face it, I live in the suburbs – chain restaurant dining is inevitable. But I really, really hate Applebee’s. I can’t think of anything on their menu that I like. If I’m dragged into an

St Anthony Applebees

Applebee's is for people who are tired of McDonalds and need a special night out.

Applebee’s, I have the worst time deciding on what to order because nothing appeals to me. The food is shit. Then again, going to Applebee’s and bitching about the food is like going to a whorehouse and complaining that you didn’t feel loved. Applebee’s tries to assemilate itself into the local fabric of the city, by plastering the walls with random framed pictures from the local high school marching band, but I swear I saw the same hockey jersey in this Applebee’s as I did in an Applebee’s in Milwaukee Wisconsin. I swear this shit is fake. Why would a historical society give precious, irreplaceable artifacts to a fucking Applebee’s?

Pei Wei – closed: I never know how to pronounce the name of this place – Pei Wei. Is it Pee Wee? It’s probably pronounced “Pay Way” but I like Pee Wee instead. Mekka Lekka high, mekka hiney-ho!

Other places include…

Cabina’s Italian Kitchen
Chipotle
Lexi Nails
Verizon Wireless
Citi Financial
Slim4Life
GNC
Wells Fargo
Freedom Value Gas Station
Ficocello’s Salon

Around the area

The other places around here are worth a mention – some are new and others have been here since the beginning of time. Like the TCF bank

Every stinkin’ time I hear of a bank robbery in the Twin Cities, 9 times out of 10, it’s at a TCF bank. If it is,

The St. Anthony TCF bank  has gotten robbed more times that I can count

TCF bank needs to get its act together

chances are, it’s taken place at this particular St. Anthony TCF. This location has been hit up more times that I can count. What’s wrong with robbing the US Bank that’s just across the street? Why does this particular bank attract all the trouble?   There’s GOT to be some sort of security issue here. This is 2009 – no bank should get robbed on a monthly basis. Get with it, TCF! Why not just tear TCF down like they did to everything else in this area? Problem solved.

The building with a Video Stardom, locally owned coffee shop that didn’t last long, and a Great Clips: All that’s left here now is the Great Clips. I’m guessing that the Video Stardom (I believe it was a Video Update before?) closed in 2006 or 2007? One time, I flirted my way out of paying late fees here.  The same dude was there a week

St Anthony

St Anthony (July 2008). Man, doesn't that green grass & summery sky bring a smile to your face & make you feel all warm inside? Especially on a day like today. -16 degrees ...and not including the windchill.

later, when I came in to rent Fahrenheit 9/11. He proceeded to ask me on a date (was it my choice in movies or my cute outfit?) and he gave me his number. With hesitation, I took it, but I never called. I was too chickenshit to face him again. I never rented movies from here again.

And that’s why I go to Red Box. No damn drama.

I tried the coffee shop once and wasn’t impressed. I’m all for supporting mom and pop places, but they’ve got to have the quality to back it up or else I’m taking my business elsewhere.  I’m 90% positive that it went out of business before the Caribou moved in, so the “chains are destroying small businesses” rant doesn’t apply here. I tried some sort of espresso drink here once and it tasted like push-button gas station cappuccino and it gave me a gut ache. Then again, coffee in general gets my internal pipes moving, so I guess that last point is moot.

Bakers Square
: I am flabbergasted that this location went out of business. St. Anthony is generally an older community and we all know how much Grandma loves that 3PM supper at Bakers Square, especially if she’s got a coupon! There really should’ve been an outpouring of support for this Bakers Square. They didn’t really have much competition in the area – there really aren’t a lot of restaurants nearby, much less those that are preferred by the retirement community. It’s not like there’s a Perkins or a Denny’s next door. What are Grandma and Grandpa going to do now that Baker’s Square is closed? Well, gives them a few more hours to watch TV judge shows and squeeze in more games of solitaire on their computer running Windows 3.1. This Bakers Square was located near Stinson Blvd (in the “back” of what was Apache Plaza). I’m guessing it went out of business sometime in late 2007? I’d go here to pick up pies for various family functions and holidays – Bakers Square makes one killer fresh strawberry pie (available seasonally).

Bakers Square, Apache

Bakers Square is fine...if you're a Golden Girl.

Other places are:
Tires Plus
Wendy’s: There was an old Taco Bell in this same area, but it was demolished sometime in 2005, I believe.
Walgreens
Rapid Oil Change
Goodyear Tires
Culvers
US Bank

I can’t end this post without sharing a few memories of mine about Apache Plaza. Even though I grew up in Brooklyn Park, we visited Apache quite often, since we had relatives who lived in this area. I was very young when the tornado hit the mall, and I remember my dad calling my aunt, uncle, and grandparents who lived around here to make sure they were safe. I have no memories of Apache pre-tornado, so I always remember Apache as a dying mall. My grandma would take my siblings and I back-to-school shopping and I remember having to pick out outfits from JC Penny’s. Probably my most fondest memory of Apache was when, on Thanksgiving, my whole family (aunts, uncles, cousins – all from my dad’s side) decided to go bowling after dinner. It was a blast – and my uncle Tim (this is the uncle who gave me ghost shit for Christmas. Pray tell Uncle Tim doesn’t read this blog! But I don’t think he’s the type who would be interested in dead malls) got so piss ass drunk that he thought he was a human bowling ball and tried to bodyslide down the bowling lane.  Believe it or not, we didn’t get kicked out. But after that incident, Mom and Dad decided it was time for our immediate family to leave. :) Good idea.

All photos taken December 2008.

Chipotle

Chipotle

The Hair Salon

The Hair Salon, located next to Chipotle

Another view of the Lifestyle Center

Another view of the Lifestyle Center

Metal animals outside of caribou. None of which are a Caribou.

Metal animals outside of Caribou Coffee. None of which are a caribou. Go figure.

Great Clips is the only tenant left in this building

Great Clips is the only tenant left in this building

Tear Apache down...BUILD CONDOS!!!!!

Tear Apache down...BUILD CONDOS!!!!!

US Bank

US Bank - this used to be a Marquette Bank

Walmart, St. Anthony

Walmart, St. Anthony

Cub Foods, St. Anthony

Cub Foods, St. Anthony

Dumpster

Relax, it's a recycling bin in front of the abandoned Pei Wei, not a trash dumpster. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle - the future is now!

St Anthony Liquors

St Anthony Liquors

A labelscar of an abandoned Bakers Square

A labelscar of an abandoned Bakers Square

A small strip center near Stinson Blvd, near the back of what was Apache Plaza & the old Apache Theater

A small strip center near Stinson Blvd, near the "back" of what was Apache Plaza & the old Apache Theater

A sign listing the stores in this strip center

A sign listing the stores in this strip center

Unique Thrift Store is a pretty decent thrift store, in regards to its pricing scheme. Goodwill & Savers charge like $8 for a pilly Gap sweater from 1995.

Unique Thrift Store is a pretty decent thrift store, in regards to its pricing scheme. Goodwill & Savers charge like $8 for a pilly Gap sweater from 1995.

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