Never mind the drab green carpet and old fitting rooms, leftovers from the empty store's previous life. What mattered to Brandy Gilbert were the cavernous ceilings — perfect, she thought, for a zipline.
The warehouse? Great for pallets of water and Gatorade. The sprawling parking lot? Ideal for the thousands of visitors that Gilbert figured would venture to the shuttered Sports Authority store in Coon Rapids after she transformed it into an adventure park.
"I could see it," said Gilbert, who now owns Minnesota's only Urban Air location, which opened last year and offers attractions like trampolines, climbing walls and a ropes course.
As thousands of big-box stores go dark nationwide, husks of once-shiny retail spaces are sitting empty across the Twin Cities, touchstones of the changing realities of retail. But signs of life are stirring as cities and brokers work to fill big boxes and smaller "junior boxes" with either new retailers or new uses, from schools to adventure parks to fitness facilities.
Some cities are taking a more aggressive redevelopment approach, actively courting desired tenants or even reducing derelict stores to rubble. Others are joining what real estate analysts describe as a growing movement to split the mammoth spaces into more bite-sized pieces.
That's the case in Blaine, where at least seven spaces either sit empty or will soon be closed. Work is now underway to subdivide two big-box stores for new tenants.
"It's difficult to find anybody that needs to take up that much space. You have to work hard and find the right match," said Erik Thorvig, Blaine's economic development coordinator. "We're working our best to get the spaces filled because we know vacant buildings can eventually be a drain on the area."
'Forever commitment'
A record-breaking 110 million square feet of retail space nationally has been slated for closure so far this year, according to real estate research firm CoStar Group, which has been tracking such totals since 2008.