Saint Louis Galleria


Saint Louis Galleria is a shopping mall in Richmond Heights, Missouri, near St. Louis.

History

Originally the site of the Westroads Shopping Center anchored by Stix Baer & Fuller, the property was sold in 1984 to Hycel Properties, which demolished most of the mall and built the Saint Louis Galleria. Dillard's, which had acquired the Stix chain, expanded the existing location at the same time, while retailer Mark Shale opened a major store.
In 1991, the building was expanded south of the Atrium. The Clayton Famous Barr store moved to the Galleria and luxury department store Lord & Taylor opened on the south end. The addition also included an emergency electric generator that can supply limited lighting and monitoring functions during a power failure. The mall receives external electric service from four points. It adopted the enclosed delivery corridor concept from the Westroads design. Trucks enter on the south end and exit on the north end. The original loading dock for the Stix store is very similar in design to the loading dock at River Roads Mall, another Stix-developed shopping mall.
The first Build-A-Bear location was opened in October of 1997.
Beginning April 20, 2007, after two incidents between teenagers and rampant shoplifting, anyone under 16 is required to be accompanied by someone at least 21 years old on Fridays and Saturdays after 3pm
Around the same time, the Richmond Heights MetroLink station opened a short distance from the mall. The two incidents along with many shoplifting and brawling cases were constantly being blamed on MetroLink, simply due to the spike in the number of such cases at the mall in August 2006 compared to the previous month. This brought fear into St. Louisians about their safety in the mall and caused a decline in Galleria patronage.
In 2006, Nordstrom planned to open a store at the mall. In December 2008, Nordstrom said it would delay the opening of the store until 2011 due to the local economy.
The recession hit Galleria sales hard in 2008. Jimmy'z and Mark Shale closed. Richmond Heights, which gets half its revenue from sales taxes and for which the Galleria is the largest taxpayer, saw sales-tax receipts drop from $10.1 million in fiscal 2007 to $9.1 million in the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2008.
In 2017, the mall was the site of protests after the acquittal of a white police officer in a shooting. There were arrests of 22 people.
In June 2018, a customer was stabbed by another customer at the mall.

Anchor stores