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Related: About this forumSears at Woodfield Mall, Illinois' Last Remaining Store, Closes Sunday After 50 Years
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Sears at Woodfield Mall, Illinois' Last Remaining Store, Closes Sunday After 50 Years
Sears blossomed through much of the 20th century, as it sold everything from homes to apparel.
Published November 12, 2021 Updated on November 13, 2021 at 12:33 am
After serving shoppers from around Chicagoland for decades, Illinois' last remaining Sears store is closing its doors for good this weekend.
The department store at Woodfield Mall in Schaumburg will close Sunday after 50 years at the popular suburban shopping center.
Transformco, the chain's parent company, announced the closure in mid-September. The company said it would look for ways to revive the space with another tenant because it also manages the real estate.
Sears Holdings, which also owned Kmart, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in October 2018. Transformco later acquired Sears out of bankruptcy and has since closed dozens of the remaining Sears and Kmart locations across the United States.
Gordon Beu takes photos inside Sears at Woodfield Mall, Thursday, Nov. 11, 2021, before it permanently closes this weekend in Schaumburg, Illinois. Beu, who worked in this store for 25 years as a customer convenience manager, needed to get one last look at the store where he spent a quarter century. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
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NBC Chicago/CNBC
Here's the story in the Chicago Tribune:
End of an era: Once a staple of the holidays and middle class life the last Sears department store in Illinois closes Sunday at Woodfield Mall
By CHRISTOPHER BORRELLI
CHICAGO TRIBUNE | NOV 12, 2021 AT 8:12 AM
So it has come to this.
The last Sears department store in Illinois, which closes Sunday in the Woodfield Mall nearly a century after the retailer opened its first stores , looks very, very... beige right now, in its final hours. Like beige on beige. Like the color of back-to-school Toughskins in 1974, the color of your uncles Corolla in 1982 and the color of linoleum at the DMV in any decade.
It opened the same day that Woodfield named for Sears executive Robert Wood and department store magnate Marshall Field opened in 1971. It was the largest Sears then, boasting 416,000 square feet of sales floor. From the looks of it in late 2021, its hard to imagine anything changed in 50 years.
The exterior now resembles a vinyl-sided carport in a crumbling neighborhood, surrounded by walls of Flintstone-esque faux stone. The interior is still organized by old familiar clusters of merchandise wrenches, mattresses, baby shoes, never-pleated slacks except everything looks slightly soiled, stripped of its freshness. Even the smell of rubber that once sweetened the power tools section has been stripped. The video monitors of pricey displays are now dark and askew. The Samsung showroom is pulled away from its moorings and its appliances are gone, leaving bouquets of frayed wiring.
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84 years of Sears Christmas catalogs: See what's inside »
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Indeed, once, the first floor of your Sears department store smelled like popcorn.
The display of its off-brand Atari consoles was a convention of neighborhood kids.
I remember going with my grandfather to buy a new washing machine and coming home with AC/DCs For Those About to Rock, We Salute You on vinyl. I remember waiting at the oversized merchandise window for a ping-pong table. I remember shopping for school clothes and finding a sea of sweaters that looked like the design team had quit 25 years earlier. I remember Sears jeans that looked like slacks. I remember a Howard Johnson across the street from Sears and baskets of clam strips.
I recall the very specific American theater of a Sears department store, which had a kind of shared middle class identity, one that was whittled away, partly by the convenience and price of Walmart and Amazon, partly by wages not keeping pace with productivity, partly by the decline of unions, shared facts and so, so much more. A large American middle class made Sears and, in exchange, Sears provided Kenmore and Craftsman, Toughskins and Discover. Whenever I see a parody of a family picture on Instagram, I think of quasi-beatific Sears portraits with mottled backdrops hanging in homes. I think of tens of thousands of Sears kit houses still standing around the country.
All relics now like the metal filing cabinets and office copy machines in the Woodfield store, hauled out of the back offices, plopped onto the floor and slapped with price tags.
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Behind the jewelry counter stood Marilyn DeAngelis.
Shes 77 and has worked here for 22 years. She was one of the cosmetics girls for a time, she said. Shes worked all over the store, all different positions. As she talked she tried clasping a thin necklace around a small display. As if presentation still mattered. As if 60% or 80% off wasnt its own enticement.
At last, she caught the clasp, draped the chain on the stand, slid it back into the glass case and looked up. She smiled sadly. Shell have to find a new job, she said. She liked this one. She didnt have a choice. Its too bad, all of it. Shell miss the Christmas decorations and even Black Friday wackos. But mostly, shell miss the Sears department store. Then again, once, it was just bigger.
cborrelli@chicagotribune.com
Tomconroy
(7,611 posts)Father's tools, that I now own, came from there.
hlthe2b
(107,472 posts)sabbat hunter
(6,915 posts)Of 2022 all Sears and KMart stores will be gone. Bank on it. Lampert is doing what he wanted to do all along. Get rid of Sears and KMart. Own almost all the real estate in a separate company that he controls.
It was his plan from day one of his buying Kmart, then merging it with Sears. He is a POS.
patphil
(7,267 posts)Namely auto parts and service, lawn and garden, and tools.
Eliminate everything else and set up their stores separate from malls. I think that would have been their best bet.
Like so many other chains, the world changed and they couldn't adapt.
MichMan
(13,887 posts)at least except for the auto parts & service. They were not profitable either
PSPS
(14,259 posts)They all made the same mistake and have suffered the same fate. You have to know more than just "finance" and "the stock market" to be successful in retail. Go to any remaining large retailer, like Macy's, and you'll see what I'm talking about. Messy store, no employees visible, merchandise not orderly, etc. It used to be that there was a store manager who would tour the store before it opened for the day and inspect every visible square inch. I've seen no evidence of that anymore.
ProfessorGAC
(71,284 posts)They got away from their distant ordering model which served them for nearly 100 years.
They OWNED an internet provider platform, had decades of customers buying sight unseen, and drooped that part of the business model, just before the internet exploded.
They could have been Amazon.
Instead they're going down the tubes.
Every exec from the Brennan era and forward should have to give back their money given the monumental nature of their strategic failures.
snowybirdie
(5,787 posts)was in to the Architecture Department of Sears. We were extremely busy building new stores in new malls all over the country. Several projects running at once. This story makes me sad. An era is over.
rickford66
(5,749 posts)Once the internet became a shopping center, they could have converted their catalog business to online. What a blunder.
Bev54
(11,953 posts)Growing up in a small rural community on Vancouver Island, my Mom bought most of our clothing and gifts from Sears Catalogue, they were Amazon before Amazon.
IDK what their management was like but they really became totally inefficient in the past years. Example: They had a BBQ on sale in fall, in their flyer so we went off to the store to buy one. We get to the store and the department and they did not know about the sale at all, so they tried to call the local warehouse to see if we could pick one up but nobody at the warehouse would pick up the phone. Their computer told them there was 51 in stock. He wouldn't let me buy one and go pick it up because he had to talk with the warehouse first and he just kept saying was they won't answer. At no time he try to get a manager involved or come up with a solution, so while I am in the store I phone their online and am able to get one immediately and it would be delivered. We went to the warehouse ourselves to see if we could pick it up, as it was only a couple of miles from our home. He confirmed that they had quite a few in stock but the online office will be shipping it from Ontario to Alberta, which they sure did. This was a large 6 burner BBQ and they sent it to a small store outlet in the middle of the city for us to go and pickup approx 2 weeks later. The inefficiency and stupidity when they had a full warehouse in the city made me write them a letter and I told them if this is how they operated I could see them going out of business and about 1 year later they did.
MichMan
(13,887 posts)all bets were off. At one time in the 60's it was thought that GM was developing a monopoly and there were investigations into forcing it to break up into smaller car companies.
MichMan
(13,887 posts)It is hard to find out who even manufactured it for them in the first place & cross references are hit or miss. Seems like every part I need is now obsolete and no longer available.
3catwoman3
(25,967 posts)
everywhere.
They junior high and much of high school (1963-1969), I got most of my school clothes from Sears. Back then, the quality and workmanship were good, and the styles were attractive. My dad worked for Allstate, so we got a 10% employee discount, which my very frugal mother appreciated.
I can still remember what some of the skirts and sweaters looked like.
And, of course, the Christmas catalog was eagerly awaited, and pored over for hours and hours.
ShazzieB
(19,136 posts)But their clothing selection starting going downhill about 15 years or so ago. As time went on, I wasn't finding much there that I liked, and it got worse and worse after the Kmart merger. I still bought shoes there, but i pretty much gave up on their clothes. Then the store here in town closed, and that was that for me.