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It was built around an existing Jordan Marsh store on Biscayne Boulevard and 14th Street in Downtown Miami. Another anchor store, JC Penney, opened on the other end. The mall consisted of two floors called "Upper Mall" and "Lower Mall".
It was built around an existing Jordan Marsh store on Biscayne Boulevard and 14th Street in Downtown Miami. Another anchor store, JC Penney, opened on the other end. The mall consisted of two floors called "Upper Mall" and "Lower Mall".


There was also a hotel, which is still in operation under the Radisson name, and a 24-hour children's day care.
There was also a hotel, which is still active under the Hilton name, and a 24-hour children's day care.


Omni means "all" and it really seems like the concept for the mall was to have everything. The mall opened with a wide variety of boutiques, from mall staples like Florsheim Shoes and Casual Corner to designer boutiques like Emilio Pucci, Givenchy, Lanvin, and Hermes. Two of the more popular bookstores of the time---B. Dalton Booksellers and Waldenbooks---had shops there.
Omni means "all" and it really seems like the concept for the mall was to have everything. The mall opened with a wide variety of boutiques, from mall staples like Florsheim Shoes and Casual Corner to designer boutiques like Emilio Pucci, Givenchy, Lanvin, and Hermes. Two of the more popular bookstores of the time---B. Dalton Booksellers and Waldenbooks---had shops there.

Revision as of 12:36, 21 April 2008

The Omni International Mall is a shopping mall that opened in 1976 and was the brainchild of developer Tibor Hollo in Downtown Miami in the United States.

In March 2007, it was announced that the mall which is now owned by Argent Ventures of New York City is to be replaced by a complex of six towers between 58 and 65 stories tall to built by 2022.[1]

It was built around an existing Jordan Marsh store on Biscayne Boulevard and 14th Street in Downtown Miami. Another anchor store, JC Penney, opened on the other end. The mall consisted of two floors called "Upper Mall" and "Lower Mall".

There was also a hotel, which is still active under the Hilton name, and a 24-hour children's day care.

Omni means "all" and it really seems like the concept for the mall was to have everything. The mall opened with a wide variety of boutiques, from mall staples like Florsheim Shoes and Casual Corner to designer boutiques like Emilio Pucci, Givenchy, Lanvin, and Hermes. Two of the more popular bookstores of the time---B. Dalton Booksellers and Waldenbooks---had shops there.

In addition to clothing, shoes, books and accessories, there were also banks, doctor's offices, Oriental Gifts, a tobacco shop, a video game parlor, a Hallmark card store, an art emporium, antique shops, a record store, crafts stores, jewelry stores, home furnishing stores and two movie theaters. There were also a number of restaurants, like Lindy's Deli, the Golden Greek, the Potato Place, and Cozzoli's Pizza.

One of the more fondly remembered areas of the mall: a children's entertainment area called Treasure Island that featured video games and classic fair games, like ski ball and the water gun shooting-the-clown-in-the-mouth-to-blow-up-the-balloon game. Treasure Island also featured rides, the most remembered being a Florida-themed carousel, which remained in use long after Treasure Island was shuttered some time in the mid-80s and replaced with more boutiques and stores, like Lerner and Lane Bryant.

In the early 90s, Jordan Marsh closed up after being at the site since the 1950s. Many say this was the beginning of the end for the mall. It's a popular belief that the deterioration of the downtown area also contributed to the mall's downfall. A Burdines opened in the Jordan Marsh space, but closed a year later as well. The downward trajectory of the mall started slowly in the early 90s, but took a steep nosedive by the later part of the decade.

By 1999, rumors of the mall's closing started coming to pass, JC Penney was now gone, and Omni was no longer the designer mall of the 70s and 80s. The mall that once housed designer boutiques like Pucci and Hermes was now the site of a dollar store. In December 1999, an Oriental Gifts shop and a Radio Shack, which were present during the mall's heyday, hung on to nearly the very end but closed soon after because by January 2000, only one store remained. The mall closed for good later in the year.

Some say the mall was ahead of its time, especially now that downtown is seeing a resurgence with a recent boom of condominiums throughout the downtown area and the rise of the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, which is a block or so away from the Omni.

In recent years, an art school has taken up residence in the first two floors of the former Jordan Marsh site. And there is talk of demolishing the mall and its multi-floor garage to make way for condominiums and sidewalk boutiques.

In March 2007, it was announced that the mall---which is now owned by Argent Ventures of New York City---is to be replaced by a complex of six towers between 58 and 65 stories tall to built by 2022.[2]

There are supporters and detractors for the idea: Some would like to see the massive complex torn down, others would like to see an attempt to bring it back to its glory days with a vigorous refurbishment.


Thoughts on Omni

According to a Janury 16, 2000 article in The Miami Herald: "When the mall was opened in 1976, there weren't as many people in the area as there are now. Now, there are more people and there are many new things in the area. With the right concept, Omni could be even better than it was during its prime." Tibor Hollo, original Omni developer and owner.

In a December 1999 Miami Herald article reporting the probable closing of the mall,"People used to dress up to come to the Omni. It was a much classier mall than Dadeland, Aventura or International Mall." Luis Bates, Omni shopper.


References

Deadmalls.com editorial by Edward Corser. [3]