An extant asset
After a freezing, damp and snowy visit to Juneau, my next stop was Alaska’s largest city, Anchorage. After a stunningly beautiful flight over the snow-covered peaks of the Chugach Mountains of southern Alaska, we descended over the broken ice of Cook Inlet and under bright blue skies. Just like that, I found myself for the first time in the largest metropolis of the Last Frontier.
I just so happened to be visiting during the weekend of the Fur Rendezvous Festival, known colloquially as Furrondy. Essentially, Furrondy is a large street fair smack dab in the center of downtown during the middle of the cold dark winter. There were prize booths and fair food vendors as well as carnival rides, and I enjoyed seeing crowds and bright lights on the streets when they would otherwise be fairly empty. But after taking in the sights, it was time to turn to my attention to my planned retail destination- the Anchorage Fifth Avenue Mall.
In a city that experiences more of the wrath of winter than most anywhere in the country, there are several malls in Anchorage to keep its citizens warm and cozy while contributing to the economy. There is the Mall at Sears, now called Midtown Mall, a small facility which used to house the city’s only, you guessed it, Sears. There is also the Dimond Center with its ice-skating rink and absence of a full-line traditional department store anchor. Then there is The Mall at Northway, which unfortunately closed in 2020. But the large monolith on Fifth Avenue reigns supreme.
Anchorage Fifth Avenue Mall’s position is anomalous compared to other markets in that, as an urban, vertical mall, it dominates the retail sector over its more suburban peers. It was anchored at the time by Nordstrom and JCPenney and boasts four levels and 447,000 square feet of space under a quite attractive central atrium.
It was Saturday night, so the mall was quite lively especially with Furrondy only a couple of blocks away. It had all of your first-tier mall basics like The Apple Store, Sephora and Eddie Bauer but also hosted a marketplace for local merchants to sell their wares on the bottom level. I loved browsing the native Alaskan artwork and crafts. I hope that it was a permanent installation and wasn’t just set up for that weekend’s festivities.
I planned on visiting Dimond later the next day, but hangover maintenance took precedence. I stayed in my hotel room that morning and watched the sun circle us at its sunken position in the sky before it was time to make my way to the airport for the relatively short flight home. I guess that missing Dimond was for the best; it gives me another reason to hurry back. That and another trip to The Raven.
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