Showing posts with label Hecht's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hecht's. Show all posts

Monday, June 07, 2010

Macy's (former Hochschild-Kohn and Hecht's); The Mall in Columbia, Columbia, Maryland

Hochschild Kohn; The Mall in Columbia, Columbia, Maryland. Mall entrance, 1970s. (Malls of America)

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Macy's (former Hecht's); Patrick Henry Mall, Newport News, Virginia. Exterior view. (photo by Pat Richardson)

Macy's (former Hecht's); Patrick Henry Mall, Newport News, Virginia. Exterior view. (photo by Pat Richardson)

Macy's (former Hecht's); Patrick Henry Mall, Newport News, Virginia. Mall entrance. (photo by Pat Richardson)

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Macy's (former Miller & Rhoads and Hecht's); Chesterfield Towne Center, Richmond, Virginia. Exterior view. (photo by Pat Richardson)

Macy's (former Miller & Rhoads and Hecht's); Chesterfield Towne Center, Richmond, Virginia. Exterior view. (photo by Pat Richardson)

Monday, January 04, 2010

Macy's; former Hecht's (The Mall at Prince George's)
Macy's; (former Hecht's); The Mall at Prince George's, Hyattsville, Maryland. Mall entrance. Photgraphed January 2, 2010.

Hecht's mall entrance, PG Plaza
Hecht's; (later Macy's); The Mall at Prince George's, Hyattsville, Maryland. Mall entrance. Photgraphed by camera phone September 5, 2005.

Hecht's mall signage - PG Plaza
Hecht's; (later Macy's); The Mall at Prince George's, Hyattsville, Maryland. Mall entrance signage. Photgraphed by camera phone September 5, 2005.
Macy's; former Hecht's (Ballston Common Mall)
Macy's (former Hecht's); Ballston Common Mall, Arlington, Virginia. Exterior view. Photgraphed December 31, 2009.

Macy's; former Hecht's (Ballston Common Mall)
Macy's (former Hecht's); Ballston Common Mall, Arlington, Virginia. Mall entrance. Photgraphed December 31, 2009.

Macy's Furniture; former Hecht's Furniture Gallery and JCPenney (Ballston Common Mall)
Macy's Furniture (former Hecht's Furniture Gallery and JCPenney); Ballston Common Mall, Arlington, Virginia. Photgraphed December 31, 2009.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

former John Wanamaker, Hecht's, strawbridge's and Boscov's; Oxford Valley Mall, Langhorne, Pennsylvania. Exterior view. (photo by Pat Richardson)

former John Wanamaker, Hecht's, strawbridge's and Boscov's; Oxford Valley Mall, Langhorne, Pennsylvania. Exterior view. (photo by Pat Richardson)

former John Wanamaker, Hecht's, strawbridge's and Boscov's; Oxford Valley Mall, Langhorne, Pennsylvania. Exterior view. (photo by Pat Richardson)

former John Wanamaker, Hecht's, strawbridge's and Boscov's; Oxford Valley Mall, Langhorne, Pennsylvania. Upper level mall entrance. (photo by Pat Richardson)

Monday, May 18, 2009

former John Wanamaker, Hecht's, strawbridge's and Macy's (King of Prussia Plaza); King of Prussia Plaza, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. Exterior view, October 26, 2008.

former John Wanamaker, Hecht's, strawbridge's and Macy's (King of Prussia Plaza); King of Prussia Plaza, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. Lower level mall entrance, October 26, 2008.

Monday, September 08, 2008

Macy's (former Hecht's), West Wendover Avenue, Greensboro, North Carolina. East entrance. Photographed 9/6/08.

Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (former Hecht's), West Wendover Avenue
Macy's (former Thalhimers and Hecht's), River Ridge Mall, Lynchburg, Virginia. Exterior entrance. Photographed 9/7/08.

Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (former Thalhimers and Hecht's), River Ridge Mall

Thursday, September 04, 2008

Macy’s (former Hecht's), Tysons Corner Center, McLean, Virginia. Exterior view. Photographed 8/30/08.

Macy’s (former Hecht's), Tysons Corner Center, McLean, Virginia. Exterior view. Photographed 8/31/08.

Macy’s (former Hecht's), Tysons Corner Center, McLean, Virginia. Exterior view of expansion area. Photographed 8/30/08.

Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (former Hecht's), Tysons Corner Center

Monday, August 04, 2008

Bsocov's (former John Wanamaker, Hecht's and Starwbridge's) , Montgomery Mall, Montgomery Township, Pennsylvania, 2008. (The Morning Call, Allentown, Pennsylvania)

Boscov's today announced its reorganization of Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The Reading, Pa.-based department store chain will close 10 of its 49 stores, including substantially all of the former May Company and Federated Department Stores locations that were acquired in 2006

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Bloomingdale's (former location of Hecht's and Woodward & Lothrop), 5300 Western Avenue Chevy Chase, Maryland. Exterior view from Western Avenue, June 21, 2008.

See also former Hecht's, Chevy Chase

Encompassing 182,458 square feet, the Chevy Chase Bloomingdale's is the chain's newest location in the Washington area.

Since 1947, this site has the location of a department store. Woodward & Lothrop operated here from 1947 to 1995, one of its first suburban locations. When Woodies went out of business, Hecht's took over the store and operated it from 1995 to 2006. Hecht's had planned on replacing the store building with a new one, but its parent company's sale to Federated Department Stores (Macy's, Inc.) changed the course somewhat. Federated decided to rebrand the store as Bloomingdale's and drastically changed the interior design.

From the press release:
The overall design of the store is quite contemporary and contains updated variations of the signature black & white image of the New York City flagship store. Interior design is the product of Mancini Duffy Architecture & Design. The Chevy Chase store features a 40-foot circular atrium topped by a skylight. Glass-enclosed escalators transverse the atrium and enhance the sightlines to all floors. Four, three-story black glass clad columns punctuate the atrium. Balustrades are clear glass and stainless steel.

Black granite and black mirror are used generously, and each major merchandise classification is edged in black lacquered portals and ceiling detailing reminiscent of prosceniums to showcase the product presentations.

Level One has a direct entrance off Western Avenue; separate, direct elevator and escalator links to the underground parking decks; and a future entrance to the open plaza currently under construction at Wisconsin Place Center. Level One houses Cosmetics, Fashion Accessories, Handbags, Women's Shoes and Jewelry, and Dresses, Coats, Swimwear, Luggage and a Fur Salon.

Cosmetics and Accessories dominate the center of the main floor with the unmistakable black & white checkerboard floor that is a Bloomingdale's trademark. Key cosmetic vendors include Bobbi Brown, Chanel, Kiehl's, Jo Malone and Laura Mercier. There are Handbag shops for Marc Jacobs, Coach, Longchamp, Ferragamo and Burberry. The open plan places the vendor shops at the perimeters and brackets the floor.

Women's Shoes is segmented into a series of alcoves, richly appointed with residential furnishings and over-sized beveled mirrors framed in black mirror for further dramatic impact. The walls have over-scaled consoles and open cabinets that give the area an eclectic feel. The assortment is focused on contemporary upscale designer and bridge vendors like Fendi, Sigerson Morrison, Ferragamo, Taryn Rose, Burberry, Coach, Kate Spade and Donald Pliner. The Shoe area opens with a strong presence in the boot and bootie category.

Directly inside the Western Avenue entrance sits Dresses, with its strong focus on social occasion apparel and Coats. Dress vendors include Carmen Marc Valvo, BCBG, Mark Bauer, Chetta B, Laundry and Tadashi. The Coat department is headquarters for one of this season's major trends-- the statement coat, from Burberry, Cinzia Rocca, Hilary Radley, Mackage and George Simonton in an environment of cream and putty with accents of brushed silver and dark wood.

Level Two features Designer and The New View, YES, Sutton, Intimate Apparel and At Your Service.

The first impression of the second floor is dominated by The New View and Designer collections. The center shops are accented in black mirror that brackets and segments the shops. There are full height, windowed alcoves in three locations on this floor, offering glimpses of natural daylight and adding useful backdrops as these are also entrances to fitting areas. Each of the store's 65 fitting rooms has been given careful thought, and been generously sized as are the luxurious seating areas throughout the store.

The Designer area features Armani Collezioni, St. John Collection and St. John Sport, Akris Punto, Sonia Rykiel, Martin Grant, Peter Som and others. The New View will house shops for Burberry, Elie Tahari, Ralph Lauren Black Label, Tory Burch, M Missoni, DKNY and Hugo Boss.

YES is set to one end of the floor yet is more exposed to The New View since even here the collections content has been enhanced to offer the latest style and trends in contemporary apparel. Collections will include Diane von Furstenberg, Theory, Vince, Juicy, Robert Rodriguez, Catherine Malandrino, Alice & Olivia, Milly and exclusive collections including Aqua, Quotations and Portfolio. The area also offers an extensive assortment of premium denim from Rock & Republic, Diesel, True Religion, Anlo, 7 for all Mankind, Citizens of Humanity, Page and James. The merchandise is arranged to allow for a mixing of styles and facilitate easy cross selling. There are large rear-projection screens anchoring the YES area that add a note of animation.

Sutton Studio, the better sportswear area, will offer vendors like Lauren by Ralph Lauren, Lilla P, XCVI, Code Vintage, Revue, Vakko, Love Amour and the store's own collection of Sutton Studio Cashmere.

Intimate Apparel is set directly off Designer/The New View. The design here echoes the Hollywood glamour image that is the hallmark of the New York 59th Street store. Merchandise is set in mirror-accented alcoves appointed with rich yet feminine touches. Vendors include Betsey Johnson, Chantelle, Elle Macpherson, Flora Nikrooz, Hanky Panky, Juicy, OnGossamer, Oscar (Pink) and Wacoal.

Level Three features Men's, the new Home Store and The Registry. Arrival to the top level is under a circular skylight and a carefully balanced mobile by New York sculptor Brandon d'Leo.

The center of the floor is a broad atrium that serves to segment the two distinct businesses of Men's and Home. Men's is set in a series of contemporary statements accented by dark, polished walnut and lighter ash accents. Segmentation distinguishes between the tailored and casual categories. There are shops for Polo Ralph Lauren, Armani Collezioni, and Ralph Lauren Black Label and Canali. More tailored clothing presentations include Boss Hugo Boss, John Varvatos, Burberry, Andrew Marc and Z-Zegna. Bridge and Contemporary collections include Hugo Boss, Marc Jacobs, Helmut Lang and Michael Kors. Men's Shoes are set into one of three full height windowed alcoves and has a masculine, clubby feeling in design and furnishings. In an opposite alcove, an extensive denim shop sets the tone for a more casual and contemporary lifestyle.

The Home Store is an entirely new Bloomingdale's concept, making its debut at Chevy Chase. The area has been designed to resemble a series of galleries with two dark chocolate arched entries distinguishing the space flanked by two huge, 25 feet wide main aisles. Here the merchandise mix has been carefully edited to offer the best of Bloomingdale's assortments, assembled into lifestyle groupings on very flexible floating pads. Barbara Barry, Thomas O'Brien, Ralph Lauren and Calvin Klein will anchor the corners of the floor and provide an edited mix of their total lifestyle assortment.

Down the center of the two main aisles, tabletop and home accents are mixed with key furniture pieces. There are two major classifications here in the galleries: Casual/Contemporary and Updated Traditional. The center galleries are set on bleached bamboo floors. There are accents of black lacquer and chocolate. Wall surfaces are artist's white. Customers can view a stimulating mix of merchandise in easily relatable settings with all of Bloomingdale's best home designers integrated throughout. Two trend areas complete the total home presentation and will change every quarter. Key domestics vendors include Bellino, Charisma, Donna Karan Essentials, Josie Natori, L'Erba and Sferra 1891.

Across the width of the area, toward the rear, are shops for the kitchen featuring clever gadgets, electrics and cookware, and shops for regency crystal and silver, with walls resembling polished concrete. Key tabletop vendors include Baccarat, Christofle, Faberge, Lalique, Michael Aram and William Yeoward; and in housewares, Alessi, All Clad, KitchenAid, Le Creuset, Nespresso, Shun, WMF and Wusthof.

The Registry is located in the center of the rear wall between the kitchen and crystal shops and houses two distinctly different areas--the very modern "Registry Bar" where couples can update their registry in a less formal, open environment and the more intimate consultation area where couples will enjoy their first appointment. The entryway is lined with lit glass cases that display Bloomingdale's top china, crystal and silver patterns.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Macy's (former Hecht's), Metro Center, 12th and G Streets NW, Washington, DC. Exterior view, June 21, 2008.

Macy's (former Hecht's), Metro Center, 12th and G Streets NW, Washington, DC. View of entrance, June 21, 2008.

Hecht's (former Macy's), Metro Center, 12th and G Streets NW, Washington, DC. View of main floor from escalator well, December 2005. (unknown image source)

Hecht's vacated its circa 1924 downtown Washington store in 1986 in favor of a new location at the corner of 12th and G Streets NW. The store was extensively renovated in 2003.

Now a Macy's location as of September 2006, the building has a direct entrance to the Metro Center station of the Washington Metro.
former Hecht's (now Terrell Place), 7th and F Streets NW, Washington, DC. Exterior view, June 21, 2008.

The Hecht Company moved its Washington location to this grand glass and marble store at the corner of 7th and F Streets Northwest in November 1925.

Hecht's was the first store in Washington to offer national brands. It also boasted the first parking garage and first elevator. Its relatively open policies made it popular among African-Americans as well as the white populace.

A tour of Norman Rockwell's Four Freedoms paintings, intended to rally support for the Allied cause in World War II and the purchase of war bonds, premiered at the store in 1943.

In July 1951, a mixed race group began to picket outside the store, protesting racial segregation in the store's cafeteria. The offending policy was changed in January of the following year.

Hecht's vacated this store in 1986 in favor of a new location at the corner of 12th and G Streets NW (built in 1985 and renovated in 2003). Now a Macy's location as of September 2006, the building has a direct entrance to the Metro Center station of the Washington Metro.

The vacated Hecht Company building, now across from the Verizon Center, was extensively renovated and reopened in 2003 as Terrell Place, honoring Mary Church Terrell's role in desegregating that and other public accommodations in Washington.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Before & After | Thalhimers / Hecht's; SouthPark, Chalortte, North Carolina

Updated with "real" Hecht's picture and additional text. (4/17/08)

Thalhimers (later Hecht's and Macy's), SouthPark mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Mall entrance, 1991. (courtesy Pat Richardson)

Hecht's (former Thalhimers, later Macy's), SouthPark mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Mall entrance with "photoshopped" Hecht's signage, 1992. (courtesy Pat Richardson)

Hecht's (former Thalhimers, later Macy's), SouthPark mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Mall entrance, 1994. (scanned from SouthPark directory)

Two of these photos were taken approximately three years apart, and one of them is a placeholder created by SouthPark mall in the interim as a placeholder. Can you spot the fake? Several LiveMalls posters have.

In 1990, Thalhimers, the Richmond, Virginia-based unit of Carter Hawley Hale Stores, was purchased by the May Department Stores Company which operated the chain (which included the above location at SouthPark, opened in 1988) as a separate division until 1992, when it was folded into May's Hecht's division, which was based in Washington, D.C.

Previously on LiveMalls

Macy's (Thalhimers/Hecht's), SouthPark

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Macy's (former Hecht's), The Streets at Southpoint, Durham, North Carolina. Exterior at night. Photographed 2/18/08.

Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (former Hecht's), The Streets at Southpoint

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Macy's, Valley View Mall, Roanoke, Virginia. Lower level entrance. Photographed 11/21/07.

Macy's Home & Children's Store, Valley View Mall, Roanoke, Virginia. Lower level entrance. Photographed 11/21/07.

Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (former Hecht's and Thalhimers), Valley View Mall

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Macy's (former Hecht's), Crabtree Valley Mall, Raleigh, North Carolina 10/20/07

Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (former Hecht's), Crabtree Valley Mall

Monday, October 15, 2007

Macy's (former Hecht's), Marlow Heights Shopping Center, Marlow Heights, Maryland. Recreated front facade using original "The Hecht Co." logo.(Neil Strawbridge).

Macy's (former Hecht's), Marlow Heights Shopping Center, Marlow Heights, Maryland. (Neil Strawbridge).
Macy's (former Hecht's), Tysons Corner Center, McLean, Virginia. Loading area. (Neil Strawbridge)

Macy's (former Hecht's), Tysons Corner Center, McLean, Virginia. Exterior entrance. (Neil Strawbridge)

Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (former Hecht's), Tysons Corner Center