Bradenton's Cortez Plaza
The Tampa Bay Area's first mall-type shopping hub, "The Crossroads of the Suncoast", was promoted with this logo.
Graphic from The Sarasota Herald Tribune
Saturday, 28 July 2012
A physical layout of the original shopping plaza. From today's jaded vantage point, it seems almost unbelievable that, in 1959, a tiny -185,000 square foot- mall could have been promoted as "mammoth"...or that it was the largest shopping center on the entire west coast of Florida.
CORTEZ PLAZA TENANTS 1960 [PARTIAL LIST]:
BELK-LINDSEY / PUBLIX supermarket / S.S. KRESGE 5 & 10 (with luncheonette) / WALGREEN DRUG (with luncheonette) / Adventurer's Cafeteria (outparcel) / Associate Loan Company / Camera's Incorporated / Carter's Shoes / City National Bank / Coach Butterfield Toys / Cortez Lanes bowling alley (outparcel) / Cortez Plaza Barber Shop / Fremacs For Men / Gordon's Jewelers / Inter-City National Bank / Jolly Roger Restaurant / Lerner Shops / Mary Jane Shoes / The Cotton Shop / Walter S. Hardin Realty & Insurance
Another November 1959 image shows the central mallway at CORTEZ PLAZA. The camera is pointed toward the corridor's southwest entryway, which is off in the distance.
Photo from Library of Congress
Here we see another view of the front facade of Belk-Lindsey. The store encompassed a modest 40,000 square feet, but was still the chain's largest single-level operation.
Photo from Library of Congress
Another view of the mallway, also looking toward the southwest. A Gordon's Jewelers store is seen on the right.
Photo from Library of Congress
A straight-on view of Center Court and Belk-Lindsey. Concrete hyperbolic parabaloid structures covered the six-hundred-and-four-foot mall, providing some degree of protection from inclement weather.
Photo from Library of Congress
The mall's southwest entry. Mary Jane Shoes is on the left, with Lerner Shops on the right.
Photo from Library of Congress
The Inter-City National Bank protruded from the south end of the complex.
Photo from Library of Congress
The completion of a new and larger mall in the vicinity, in 1973, spelled trouble for CORTEZ PLAZA. A renovation in 1979-'80 failed to halt its decline. In 1987, the circa-1959 portions of the mall were bulldozed and replaced with a 289,000 square foot power center. The new & improved CORTEZ PLAZA was completed in late 1988.
Graphic from the Sarasota Herald Tribune
An aerial plan of today's CORTEZ PLAZA, with structures dating back to the old open-air mall highlighted in blue.
Original photo from www.googleearth.com
Bed, Bath & Beyond operates a 25,000 square foot store in the CORTEZ EAST strip center. The space was once part of a Woolco discount mart.
Photo from www.loopnet.com / Franklin Street
Ross Dress for Less leases a 28,800 square foot section of the old CORTEZ EAST Woolco.
Photo from www.loopnet.com / Franklin Street
CORTEZ PLAZA
Tamiami Trail / US 41 and Cortez Road
Manatee County, Florida
The first shopping mall in the Tampa Bay Area was built on a 23 acre tract, located 33.6 miles southwest of center city Tampa and 2.1 miles south of downtown Bradenton. The 3 million dollar shopping complex was developed by Yonkers, New York-based Eastern Shopping Centers and Bradenton's Walter S. Hardin Realty.
CORTEZ PLAZA was designed by Bradenton's Edward Dean Wyke, with assistance from New York City's Lathrop Douglass. The single-level structure, which encompassed 185,000 leasable square feet, was built from the ground up in only 7 months. Its open-air mallway was covered by a series of concrete hyperbolic parabaloids, similar to those used in the fully-enclosed APACHE PLAZA (1961), in Minnesota.
The official dedication of CORTEZ PLAZA was held February 12, 1959. Dignitaries on hand to assist in cutting the ceremonial ribbon included Van Ness Wood and Edward Homer (of Eastern Shopping Centers), Walter S. Hardin (of Hardin Realty) and State Senator Edward Price, Junior (R).
Ten stores began business as part of the grand opening. A 1-level (40,000 square foot), Orlando-based Belk-Lindsey featured WTRL radio's "Studio-On-The-Mall" as part of its front display window. The 1-level (21,000 square foot) S.S. Kresge 5 & 10 was the chain's first Florida location. Moreover, an ultra-modern Grand Union supermarket was the first Tampa area store opened by the Patterson, New Jersey-based chain.
By the end of 1959, the tenant list of thirty-two stores and services included Walgreen Drug, Lerner Shops, Fremacs For Men and the Jolly Roger Restaurant. The freestanding Cortez Lanes bowling alley was dedicated July 26, 1959. The Grand Union grocery was converted to a Publix in November of the same year.
A second outparcel of the mall, an (11,800 square foot) Adventurer's Cafeteria, served its first meals February 9, 1960. It was eventually rebranded as a William Tally House Coffee Shop. The third freestanding structure added to CORTEZ PLAZA was the CORTEZ SOUTH strip center. Encompassing 33,200 square feet, it was completed in 1966.
The fourth addition, known as CORTEZ EAST, encompassed 182,300 leasable square feet and housed a 1-level (116,000 square foot) Woolco. This store began business September 23, 1968. Woolco was joined by the Jerry Lewis Twin Cinema, which showed its first features December 25, 1971.
The basic structure of CORTEZ PLAZA, and its outparcels, now housed approximately 400,000 leasable square feet. However, the retail hub was overshadowed by the opening of DESOTO SQUARE, in August 1973. Built across Cortez Road / 44th Avenue West, the fully-enclosed complex encompassed 700,000 leasable square feet and over eighty stores and services.
As a keeping up measure, a renovation was done to CORTEZ PLAZA in 1979-1980, restyling the mall with a "marketplace atmosphere", complete with new restaurants, various craft and flower peddlers, magicians and entertainment. The original Mid-Century Modern architecture was replaced with Spanish-style stucco arches and a lighted belfry.
Stores and services in operation at the newly-renovated CORTEZ PLAZA included Publix, Walgreen Drug, Ace Hardware, Ye Olde Tobacconist, Great Earth Vitamin Stores, The Camp & Hike Shop, Pier 1 Imports, Helyn Brown ladies' wear, Cortez Bakery, June's Hallmark Shop and House of Originals Gift Shop.
Belk-Lindsey had closed its CORTEZ PLAZA store June 15, 1979 and moved to DESOTO SQUARE. Miami-based J. Byron assumed the vacant space at CORTEZ PLAZA late in the year. By the mid-1980s, the 1980 reinvention had become rather stale, It was obvious, CORTEZ PLAZA could not effectively compete with DESOTO SQUARE.
A wrecking ball renovation commenced in 1987. All of the circa-1959 mall was demolished, leaving the newer CORTEZ SOUTH and CORTEZ EAST strip centers intact. These were worked into a 289,100 square foot power center, retaining the name CORTEZ PLAZA.
The renewed shopping venue opened in 1988, anchored by a 1-level (84,900 square foot), Massachusetts-based Zayre discount mart. There were also a Publix supermarket, Walgreen Drug and Circuit City SuperStore.
The Zayre was short-lived. It morphed into a Connecticut-based Ames in October 1989 and was shuttered in September 1990. Montgomery Ward opened in the store space in early 1991. This store was shuttered in March 2001 and re-opened, as a Burlington Coat Factory, on October 1, 2001.
By December 2003, CORTEZ PLAZA had changed hands three times. The current owner, Beachwood, Ohio-based Developers Diversified Realty, purchased the property in February 2007.
Sources:
Malls Of America Blogspot / Keith Milford webmaster
"Belk" article on Wikipedia
http://www.nreionline.com
http://www.inlandse.com
www.simon.com (Desoto Square Mall)
www.cinematreasures.org
Tamiami Trail / US 41 and Cortez Road
Manatee County, Florida
The first shopping mall in the Tampa Bay Area was built on a 23 acre tract, located 33.6 miles southwest of center city Tampa and 2.1 miles south of downtown Bradenton. The 3 million dollar shopping complex was developed by Yonkers, New York-based Eastern Shopping Centers and Bradenton's Walter S. Hardin Realty.
CORTEZ PLAZA was designed by Bradenton's Edward Dean Wyke, with assistance from New York City's Lathrop Douglass. The single-level structure, which encompassed 185,000 leasable square feet, was built from the ground up in only 7 months. Its open-air mallway was covered by a series of concrete hyperbolic parabaloids, similar to those used in the fully-enclosed APACHE PLAZA (1961), in Minnesota.
The official dedication of CORTEZ PLAZA was held February 12, 1959. Dignitaries on hand to assist in cutting the ceremonial ribbon included Van Ness Wood and Edward Homer (of Eastern Shopping Centers), Walter S. Hardin (of Hardin Realty) and State Senator Edward Price, Junior (R).
Ten stores began business as part of the grand opening. A 1-level (40,000 square foot), Orlando-based Belk-Lindsey featured WTRL radio's "Studio-On-The-Mall" as part of its front display window. The 1-level (21,000 square foot) S.S. Kresge 5 & 10 was the chain's first Florida location. Moreover, an ultra-modern Grand Union supermarket was the first Tampa area store opened by the Patterson, New Jersey-based chain.
By the end of 1959, the tenant list of thirty-two stores and services included Walgreen Drug, Lerner Shops, Fremacs For Men and the Jolly Roger Restaurant. The freestanding Cortez Lanes bowling alley was dedicated July 26, 1959. The Grand Union grocery was converted to a Publix in November of the same year.
A second outparcel of the mall, an (11,800 square foot) Adventurer's Cafeteria, served its first meals February 9, 1960. It was eventually rebranded as a William Tally House Coffee Shop. The third freestanding structure added to CORTEZ PLAZA was the CORTEZ SOUTH strip center. Encompassing 33,200 square feet, it was completed in 1966.
The fourth addition, known as CORTEZ EAST, encompassed 182,300 leasable square feet and housed a 1-level (116,000 square foot) Woolco. This store began business September 23, 1968. Woolco was joined by the Jerry Lewis Twin Cinema, which showed its first features December 25, 1971.
The basic structure of CORTEZ PLAZA, and its outparcels, now housed approximately 400,000 leasable square feet. However, the retail hub was overshadowed by the opening of DESOTO SQUARE, in August 1973. Built across Cortez Road / 44th Avenue West, the fully-enclosed complex encompassed 700,000 leasable square feet and over eighty stores and services.
As a keeping up measure, a renovation was done to CORTEZ PLAZA in 1979-1980, restyling the mall with a "marketplace atmosphere", complete with new restaurants, various craft and flower peddlers, magicians and entertainment. The original Mid-Century Modern architecture was replaced with Spanish-style stucco arches and a lighted belfry.
Stores and services in operation at the newly-renovated CORTEZ PLAZA included Publix, Walgreen Drug, Ace Hardware, Ye Olde Tobacconist, Great Earth Vitamin Stores, The Camp & Hike Shop, Pier 1 Imports, Helyn Brown ladies' wear, Cortez Bakery, June's Hallmark Shop and House of Originals Gift Shop.
Belk-Lindsey had closed its CORTEZ PLAZA store June 15, 1979 and moved to DESOTO SQUARE. Miami-based J. Byron assumed the vacant space at CORTEZ PLAZA late in the year. By the mid-1980s, the 1980 reinvention had become rather stale, It was obvious, CORTEZ PLAZA could not effectively compete with DESOTO SQUARE.
A wrecking ball renovation commenced in 1987. All of the circa-1959 mall was demolished, leaving the newer CORTEZ SOUTH and CORTEZ EAST strip centers intact. These were worked into a 289,100 square foot power center, retaining the name CORTEZ PLAZA.
The renewed shopping venue opened in 1988, anchored by a 1-level (84,900 square foot), Massachusetts-based Zayre discount mart. There were also a Publix supermarket, Walgreen Drug and Circuit City SuperStore.
The Zayre was short-lived. It morphed into a Connecticut-based Ames in October 1989 and was shuttered in September 1990. Montgomery Ward opened in the store space in early 1991. This store was shuttered in March 2001 and re-opened, as a Burlington Coat Factory, on October 1, 2001.
By December 2003, CORTEZ PLAZA had changed hands three times. The current owner, Beachwood, Ohio-based Developers Diversified Realty, purchased the property in February 2007.
Sources:
Malls Of America Blogspot / Keith Milford webmaster
"Belk" article on Wikipedia
http://www.nreionline.com
http://www.inlandse.com
www.simon.com (Desoto Square Mall)
www.cinematreasures.org
FAIR USE OF CORTEZ PLAZA IMAGES:
The graphics from The Sarasota Herald Tribune illustrate a key moment in the mall's history that is described in the article. The images are of lower resolution than the originals (copies made would be of inferior quality). The images are not replaceable with free-use or public-domain images. The use of the images does not limit the copyright owners' rights to distribute the images in any way. The images are being used for non-profit, informational purposes only and their use is not believed to detract from the original images in any way.
BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOS:
From the Gottscho-Schleisner Collection / Repository: United States Library Of Congress Prints and Photograph Division, Washington, D.C. / Taken by Gottscho-Schleisner, Inc., November 1959 / Lathrop Douglass- Client / Photographs are in the public domain: no known restrictions on publication / www.loc.gov/rr/print/catalog.html
From the Gottscho-Schleisner Collection / Repository: United States Library Of Congress Prints and Photograph Division, Washington, D.C. / Taken by Gottscho-Schleisner, Inc., November 1959 / Lathrop Douglass- Client / Photographs are in the public domain: no known restrictions on publication / www.loc.gov/rr/print/catalog.html
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