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Century III Mall - A Dead Mall Built on the Ashes of Pittsburgh’s Steel Industry-Expedition Log # 14

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  • Опубликовано: 22 фев 2018
  • Support the Expedition Log on Patreon, if you like! - / salvatoreamadeo
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    On the 14th episode of the Expedition Log, we visit the Century iii mall near Pittsburgh, PA. This mall has declined over the years, and is currently in its final moments. Moonbeam is running the mall with security in a police state, and will stop you if you're just walking around with your phone, and check it to make sure you're not filming...
    Thank you to everyone for supporting me on these adventures so far! We're over 400 subscribers, which is absolutely amazing!
    #Century3 #ExLog #Sal

Комментарии • 4,1 тыс.

  • @sal
    @sal  6 лет назад +220

    My 2019 Century III Sequel (Shows the Abandoned Bits!) - ruclips.net/video/GN6LHouowF8/видео.html
    The Abandoned Sears at Century III - ruclips.net/video/hsNB83bRL_k/видео.html
    March 2024 Edit: Demolition has begun at Century III. I will have one final video on the mall at some point. Thank you all for the views over the years, this is the end of an era.
    April 11 2019 Edit: The mall is now shuttered, and I have released the sequel to this video (See Below for links), plus a video touring the inside of the abandoned Sears. Thank you all so much for the engagement on this video!
    July 6 2018 Edit: The developers of Century iii weren't celebrating the third Centennial...they were ushering it in. They were looking to the future in a celebration of 1976-2076. Clearly they should've done more research. I should've been more clear about this in the video! Also, the Sherriff's sale was postponed yet again, and this time until September!
    June 4 2018 Edit: It appears that the sheriff's sale has been postponed until July:
    www.post-gazette.com/business/pittsburgh-company-news/2018/06/04/Struggling-Century-III-Mall-sheriff-s-sale-west-mifflin/stories/201806040069
    -----
    It was just announced that Century iii will be going up for sale at Sherriff's auction. While this doesn't necessarily mean it is closing for good, it can go one of a few ways. The new owner may try to revitalize it, or they may raze, to create something new. At this point it's still unknown, but time will tell.
    Edit: As sharp sighted Dan Zunko has noticed, I mistakenly stated that Wicke’s Furniture replaced the old Gimbels top floor in *1977*...Of course I meant 1997, but I mis-spoke...I said 1977 in the narrative, but again, I meant 1997!! I also said that Gimbels opened Aug must 1, 1979, but I meant 1980. Sorry for the confusion!!! Thanks Dan!!
    pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2018/04/12/century-iii-mall-sheriffs-sale-posted-notice/

    • @tyralikadiamondstar8960
      @tyralikadiamondstar8960 6 лет назад +6

      Sal Can you please give us another update if you hear anything else about this

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад +5

      Of course. One the sale goes through I’ll be keeping an incredibly close eye on it. I *may* revisit on my way out to Ohio again

    • @rubym357
      @rubym357 6 лет назад +3

      Saw on Ace's channel this morning. There'll be a sheriff's sale in June from what he reports.

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад +2

      Yep, I made a sticky comment at the top of the comments here. Hopefully the new owners bring some life back to it.

    • @joestewart8914
      @joestewart8914 6 лет назад +6

      Nobody can say that this mall is not EPIC in every way. It was overwhelming in 1979 when it opened and it is an EPIC failure now.

  • @sdimartino
    @sdimartino 5 лет назад +393

    I always get sad watching videos like this. I'm a child of the 80's, and I spent a good portion of my childhood in places like this. Going to the arcade, getting an Orange Julius or a hot dog on a stick, hanging out with friends, etc. To see these places now rotting, empty, and desolate, I feel like I'm losing a piece of my childhood. It's heartbreaking.
    Thanks for the amazing video.

    • @sal
      @sal  5 лет назад +26

      It’s utterly heartbreaking how far these malls have fallen...thank you so much for watching! Tons more on the way!

    • @MultiBrad777
      @MultiBrad777 5 лет назад +3

      Sergio Di Martino in DEED.....But the vast number of these malls that were built are identical... and from the same timeframe.... our great memories were cloned :)

    • @Dxxxxxxx85
      @Dxxxxxxx85 5 лет назад +2

      Same here... brings good memories

    • @jaimebranam
      @jaimebranam 5 лет назад +10

      Sbarro's

    • @nativetexanful
      @nativetexanful 5 лет назад +4

      I feel the same way you do when I watch these videos. I see these empty malls so eerily quiet and imagine what they were like when they were thriving and full of people shopping for clothes and other things. Where I live there are some malls that are still open, but many of the shops are empty. They're just hanging by a thread.

  • @lizzierome1581
    @lizzierome1581 5 лет назад +179

    Century three Chevrolet Lebanon church road Pittsburgh minutes from the mall! Who else remembers that jingle? It's been seared into my memory.

    • @thegmack100
      @thegmack100 5 лет назад +2

      Lizzie Rome when I heard it I forgot that it’s been forever since actually seeing those commercials. Seared into your memory is correct because it seems like yesterday lol.

    • @MrTzcat
      @MrTzcat 5 лет назад +1

      Bendix Olds jingle is one I remember the best.

    • @len-zeplin480
      @len-zeplin480 5 лет назад

      Yep, We Remember it. Maybe C3 will get a Bailout like GM did. (They're too big to Fail) So we're told.

    • @loumac2955
      @loumac2955 4 года назад +1

      The jingle still exist for Century 3 Chevrolet and every time I hear it, I add Minutes from the Mall. I loved this mall, in it's prime it was beautiful but in fairness many malls in Pittsburgh have survived the change in shoppers habits and some, like Ross Park Mall and Robinson Mall continue to do well.

    • @sarahlynch4777
      @sarahlynch4777 4 года назад +2

      I just sang it as I read your comment lol

  • @darlenebruce679
    @darlenebruce679 3 года назад +32

    The last time I was in JCPenneys, I looked out into the emptiness of the mall with tears. Remembering how many times I waited for my daughter to finally come down those stairs. So sad, but a lot of good memories.

  • @dontellgucci1117
    @dontellgucci1117 5 лет назад +101

    I was at this mall Christmas shopping in 1982 it was decorated so beautiful. This is sad to see

    • @TralfazConstruction
      @TralfazConstruction 5 лет назад +7

      Malls around the country became the town squares of their day. The heyday of the malls in southeastern Pennsylvania and into New Jersey was the mid-2000s and then began the rapid decline. King of Prussia Mall is still battling the headwinds of online commerce but there are no guarantees. That area is affluent and can yet sustain a large mall complex. I'll even take a ride out there, twenty-three miles away from where I live, to enjoy the hustle and bustle.

    • @UFOROX
      @UFOROX 4 года назад +6

      I worked at this mall in the 80s. And it was a special place during the holidays.

    • @Mojj2099
      @Mojj2099 4 года назад

      UFOROX wow that’s crazy me and my dad went there a few times couple years ago. Every time there was only a few people shopping never seen it busy

  • @thed.i.ytinyhouseguy136
    @thed.i.ytinyhouseguy136 5 лет назад +804

    You know a location is done for when the first thing you see is a Spirits Halloween store sign.

    • @mixingrecords
      @mixingrecords 5 лет назад +3

      The D.I.Y Tiny House Guy fax

    • @Deenique16
      @Deenique16 5 лет назад +4

      Lol that's not true

    • @KK-ex5zu
      @KK-ex5zu 5 лет назад +24

      Yeah no doubt, or in the south where I'm from they'll turn an old Sears or Macy's into a huge gun store or a huge fitness store that nobody uses!

    • @MrEZE36
      @MrEZE36 5 лет назад +15

      Very true, these places get desperate for revenue and will approve short term 2 month leases

    • @Ego-de4dt
      @Ego-de4dt 5 лет назад +6

      No truer words have ever been spoken.

  • @good151
    @good151 3 года назад +31

    This video literally made me cry. I remember going there with my mom and my brother when it first opened in 1979. I was 18 at the time. I remember being on the second floor and looking over at the workers who were still putting in the food court. I have so many memories there with not only my Mom, who passed in 1983, but also with my own kids. This was such a beautiful mall and it had everything you could possibly be looking for. The hours I spend in the record stores haha Thank you for sharing this. While the Mall may be closed up for good now...the memories can never be taken away.

    • @thomasrpoulsen
      @thomasrpoulsen Год назад +2

      God bless you LouAnn

    • @tiffanycurry4747
      @tiffanycurry4747 11 месяцев назад

      Makes me cry too

    • @Ironcabbit
      @Ironcabbit 10 месяцев назад

      Seems like it was a very central mall - and famous due to Dawn of the Dead - so why did it die so finally and where’s the investment to resurrect it?

  • @fbarrios99
    @fbarrios99 4 года назад +5

    I was the first mall manager of Century III and have many fond memories of a great shopping center. When we opened the mall was the second largest mall in the country after another DeBartolo mall in Cleveland called Randall Park Mall. My 4 years there were instrumental in helping me and my career of 35 years in mall management. Sad to see it know but time moves on and nothing stays relevant forever.

  • @ddelaney712
    @ddelaney712 5 лет назад +89

    Now I know what people say about the soul leaving a place. I can almost hear the past echoing in the hallways. The future? Silence.

  • @Victoria_Marie
    @Victoria_Marie 5 лет назад +59

    I teared up a little bit at 17:34 I remember running up that ramp as a kid the "puppy store" was right around there actually closer to the food court if I recall and after we left there we went over to Sears.

    • @AskWlat
      @AskWlat 4 года назад +3

      Victoria Marie that was my routine with my mom too: go look at the puppies before we leave and go home.

    • @christiankatic5408
      @christiankatic5408 4 года назад +1

      You and me both. I remember doing the same thing!

    • @shinomustdie
      @shinomustdie 3 года назад

      You remember that parrot that had in there. It used to scare me lol

    • @ericacorrea1939
      @ericacorrea1939 3 года назад

      Yes the puppy store😭

  • @davethomas8978
    @davethomas8978 5 лет назад +194

    I'm an old man now, but I remember watching the slag being dumped while shopping at the Haines' store. This was decades before the mall was built. I also shopped at the mall from time to time... Thanks for the walk down memory lane...

    • @sal
      @sal  5 лет назад +4

      You’re welcome, Dave! Thank you for watching!

    • @davethomas8978
      @davethomas8978 5 лет назад +3

    • @nohandle227
      @nohandle227 5 лет назад +6

      You're not alone Dave....It was wild at night...almost the whole top of the slag dump glowed red....

    • @erinbricker-urbanhistorian5803
      @erinbricker-urbanhistorian5803 5 лет назад +1

      Happy new year Dave Thomas and Robert.a.ziemba

    • @coach714
      @coach714 5 лет назад +6

      Dave Thomas, the Wendy's guy?!?!

  • @NickFerry
    @NickFerry 5 лет назад +56

    No idea what it was about this video, but I was stuck to watching it - I'll chalk it up to deep existential thought with a heavy dash of better days gone by - btw, I have never been to this mall and the last time I was in PA I was stuck on the turnpike for hours - but not everyone can say they've made a snowman in the middle of the PA turnpike - so I got that going for me, which is nice - great video and even better story telling - If you're interested in more dead malls check out east town mall in Green Bay, Wisconsin - drop in and I'll give you a tour

    • @sal
      @sal  5 лет назад +5

      I love you. Thank you so much for watching and please stay tuned and sub for more!

    • @obaniehia
      @obaniehia 3 года назад +1

      a bit late for a reply but... you didn't miss much...

    • @jab69420
      @jab69420 3 года назад +3

      I made a pb&j sandwich on the pa turnpike so I doubt many can also say that

    • @beegee80
      @beegee80 3 года назад +2

      I get caught in a loop of watching dead mall videos. I find them really relaxing. I don't know why. They're just super fascinating to me.

    • @connartistt8
      @connartistt8 3 года назад

      @@beegee80 same, I just found them yesterday and I’m addicted

  • @leisasmith4983
    @leisasmith4983 5 лет назад +150

    Some day I wish someone would see the vision I've had for many years as I've watched these malls of yesteryear phasing out...as a baby boomer I see such amazing potential in these buildings for all inclusive living. They've done it across America with old abandoned schools with much success. These malls could provide housing along with eateries, hair salons, Walmarts etc...everything a person could need for everyday living. There would be common areas similar to indoor parks. The sky is the limit and these abandoned malls could be the most amazing all inclusive living communities. Someone could make a fortune!

    • @braddocke.hutton7392
      @braddocke.hutton7392 5 лет назад +20

      I like this idea.
      Some day they'll look back and think we were idiots for letting these places die.

    • @kimberlys655
      @kimberlys655 5 лет назад +10

      Here in Austin, a recently closed mall has transitioned into a beautiful community college campus. An old escalator has been turned into half of it...a stairway...and then the other half of it is now a bunch of really cool wooden seating with giant pillows.

    • @SR-oc7fc
      @SR-oc7fc 5 лет назад +4

      Sign me up. I'd dump my mother (who is currently living with me after losing her house) there in a heartbeat!

    • @tjroelsma
      @tjroelsma 5 лет назад +2

      Your idea is good, but it has a few problems. A lot of these malls are built on old garbage dumps and other parcels of land where all kinds of questionable materials are dumped in the past. So to see if a mall can be converted to housing would require some deep investigation on the history of not only the mall, but also of the land it is built on, in order to prevent serious health problems.

    • @spazzman90
      @spazzman90 5 лет назад +13

      My wife and I would love to live in one of these. Open the food court, have a grocery store, open some smaller retail spaces. Bingo. Hell of a lot more attractive than your standard apartment life.

  • @mattbenz99
    @mattbenz99 5 лет назад +93

    This video is such a great explanation about why Americans are so tense right now. They are literally seeing a way of life that lasted for almost a century disappear in front of their eyes. The mall was a trademark of American prosperity, and they are disappearing all across the country. This along with the de-industrialization of the industry that created this prosperity is making people panic. The times, they are changing. Reminds me of the song Allentown by Billy Joel. We have a generation that feels lied to, they feel like the American dream is outside of their reach.
    "For the promises our teachers gave, if we worked hard, if we behaved. So the graduations hang on the wall, but they never really helped us at all."

    • @MediocreRebel
      @MediocreRebel 5 лет назад +12

      Yeah, I think we're screwed sometimes. Too expensive to eat healthy, too expensive for doctors, can barely go out on the weekends because theres no extra money to do that.

    • @mattbenz99
      @mattbenz99 5 лет назад +8

      @@MediocreRebel
      Ya, I truly do believe that we are going to need quite radical reform in the next few decades. Companies no longer need the amount of workers they once did, and this is an issue that will compound as time goes on due to automation.
      Apple is currently the biggest company in the world, but they don't employ 10% of the amount of people Ford did when they held that title in the 60s. We are heading into a world where there simply are no available jobs for people. This is why we need a radical rethink because nothing from Marxism to Libertarianism is capable of solving this issue. Those ideologies are dependent on the working class already existing to help. UBI, in some form, is the inevitable future

    • @rogermoody2660
      @rogermoody2660 5 лет назад

      mattbenz99 [Canadian Gambit] Craft beer bar!

    • @len-zeplin480
      @len-zeplin480 5 лет назад +4

      Funny Thing is Allentown was Recorded at the High Point of Mall Prosperity.

    • @SebisRandomTech
      @SebisRandomTech 4 года назад +3

      Happy to see someone else who appreciates Billy Joel!

  • @wvmontani
    @wvmontani 5 лет назад +347

    This was painful to watch. My girlfriend-turned-wife and I used to shop there in the early 1980s. It seemed like almost a magical place to us. Some of the best years of our lives. :(

    • @michaelsmith9308
      @michaelsmith9308 5 лет назад +3

      You just need to visit club 33:) Game on:)

    • @whatmikedoes7358
      @whatmikedoes7358 5 лет назад +12

      me too bud, my girlfriend turned wife and I used to work there as well as shop and hang out, definitely a magical place for us. boy that place sure would get buzzing during the holidays huh. and the weekends in the summer were fun.

    • @amsandison5015
      @amsandison5015 5 лет назад +5

      WVMontani I agree with you 100%
      My friends and I used to live at the mall in the 80’s and 90’s it was like an entirely different world
      I live in Canada so they don’t stay empty long they just get torn down 😥

    • @williamt5837
      @williamt5837 5 лет назад +3

      I remember shopping there with my Mom and Grandma

    • @deendrew36
      @deendrew36 5 лет назад +9

      BorisaRed they probably spent a lot of time together there! In the 80’s and 90’s, teens spent lots of time in malls because it was cheap.

  • @llg3pe
    @llg3pe 5 лет назад +3

    When I was 12 back in ‘82, I used to go there on Friday nights with my mother and grandmother. They bought a pendulum clock in the clock store which my mom still has today. It used to be packed with people and was booming back then. It was THE mall in Pittsburgh when it opened.

  • @lovetodecorate7568
    @lovetodecorate7568 4 года назад +3

    Boy do I miss this mall😪. It was our best, largest and most fun to hang out in. I noticed it started going down hill when the Waterfront Mall in Homestead opened which I had a feeling it would. I have such fond nostalgia of this mall. There was a time when u couldn’t even get a good parking space, it was that popular and & busy. I had a buddy that worked at a jewelry counter in the middle of it. I recognized every scene shot in Mind Hunter. Such a shame.....😪😥😓

  • @davidallen3158
    @davidallen3158 5 лет назад +171

    I remember when you could spend the whole day in the mall.

    • @BiffBallbag
      @BiffBallbag 5 лет назад +10

      You still can, you'll just be by yourself.

    • @Cj-hj6rm
      @Cj-hj6rm 5 лет назад

      @@BiffBallbag rip

    • @garnettsean
      @garnettsean 3 года назад

      Yes indeed

  • @hectorfr91
    @hectorfr91 5 лет назад +68

    I guarantee this video will hit EVERY GEN Xer right between the eyes, ALL THE MEMORYS. These kids today have no idea on that which they missed out.
    I LOVED THE 80s it was an amazing time to be out and about with your friends. SAD SAD SAD.

    • @RF-vg5kv
      @RF-vg5kv 5 лет назад +1

      This makes me sad, I spent many of weekends at centry 3 mall as a kid, it was the place to go.

    • @daedum3177
      @daedum3177 4 года назад +1

      I couldn't agree more. My god I spent entire weeks at my local mall in the late eighties and early nineties during the summer when school wasnt in session.

    • @angelalopez8897
      @angelalopez8897 4 года назад +4

      Wish we could have stayed in the 80s forever!

    • @JJ-wk5wy
      @JJ-wk5wy 4 года назад +1

      I loved the 80's. I'm an 80' s kid. I still have great memories of going shopping at the mall with my mom. Being an 80' s teen probably would have been fun too.

    • @ShepherdsSolarGuy
      @ShepherdsSolarGuy 4 года назад +3

      I wish I could’ve lived during the 80’s during these teen years. I’m 18 and everyone just seems so out of touch with reality and don’t know how to socialize. It’s really said and I feel like I would have thrived back then.

  • @limoman4125
    @limoman4125 4 месяца назад +2

    I came searching for centry lll videos a couple years ago!! I came across sal!! Became a fan of his videos!! And still watch to this day!! After watching tonight premiere and knowing they are in the process of starting demo on the mall decided to come back and watch the videos sal did!! I know noone will see this comment but sal thank u this 3 part video u did on our mall tells the story the best and i along with lots of others i know appreciate what u did

  • @christiankatic5408
    @christiankatic5408 4 года назад +3

    I grew up about a half-hour south of Century III and this just sent such vivid memories flooding back in. The last time I remember it actually being busy (which was notable because it was such a big mall, and even then - the 3rd floor barely had anything in it) my dad and I were Christmas shopping for my mom when I was probably 6 years old. Appropriately and somewhat ironically, I remember the song, “Time to Say Goodbye” by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman playing as we held hands, walking back through the concourse. It’s funny. I feel like when I was a kid, I couldn’t wait to grow up, and now I’m watching this video, daydreaming about being a kid again. It’s those memories that myself and so many others hold that make places like this more than just a building. Thanks for taking the time to shoot this!

  • @CMB76
    @CMB76 6 лет назад +24

    Thank you for this very insightful and well produced video. I was 3 years old when this mall opened, and went there my entire life. At one point they had a couple nice arcades, two toy stores, two music stores, a great little hobby shop, etc. It was THE place to go for everybody. There was a stage downstairs with live shows where I saw Scooby Doo and even Richard Simmons. My Ex wife worked at about 4 different stores there, and I could see the decline even back around 2008 and 2009. All of the stores she worked in are now gone. The last time I was there was about two years ago, and I can't believe how much worse it has gotten. Century III will always be part of my great childhood and young adult memories.

    • @whorton4
      @whorton4 6 лет назад +1

      Pretty sad isn't it. A lot of us baby boomers feel the same way about all sorts of stuff that is gone now. I know how you feel.

    • @matto8o9
      @matto8o9 6 лет назад +2

      It's sad to see such places that were full of activity and community go by the wayside like some old shoe just so some endless cycle of a wastefully society can just continue to spin it's wheels without any real progress! In my opinion society is devolving into a new kind of chaos!

    • @adamtereska8734
      @adamtereska8734 6 лет назад +1

      Part of the problem that hasn't been mentioned is it's not just criminal thug activity, but people have simply changed. If it can be ordered online, why go to a store, where there are people, lines to wait in, finding a place to park, etc.? A big blind eye is turned to the flat lazification of humanity not wanting to go get something when it can be delivered to your door.
      For me, if I order something online, it is because the stores around me don't have it or it is something out of production. If it is in the stores, I go to the stores. People need to get off their lazy asses and go to the stores and buy the products they want.

  • @jerrybowker2018
    @jerrybowker2018 5 лет назад +36

    Wow. I lived nearby this Mall when I was a kid and hung out there alot ( this was early to mid 80's) and have some cool memories of that place. To see it like this now decades later is a freaking trip. It was beautiful in it's time. I hope it gets a fresh shot at being something again.

    • @sundance0825
      @sundance0825 5 лет назад +2

      Why aren't the old malls rehabbed as an apartment complex for elderly and disabled? Even working folks who appreciate affordable living which provides a few restaurants, shops, offices. Maybe a theater, indoor pools, gyms. The open spaces in the middle would be a wonderful community type atmosphere since the weather here is 90% of the time is just plain drearily miserable.

    • @theangryitalian7922
      @theangryitalian7922 5 лет назад

      Lisa Anne Grillo because that idea makes too much sense and no money 💰

  • @ryerwilkes3051
    @ryerwilkes3051 4 года назад +13

    My dog came from the pet store that used to be there
    RIP Thor you were a good dog

  • @rachelrivera91
    @rachelrivera91 2 месяца назад +1

    Like probably many of your subscribers or viewers in general, I had this profound sense to come back to this video to re view it once again. I don’t know if it’s just the fact that this video had more than a million views but it’s a video production that stood the test of time. 6 years after the video released, you’re still seeing more people viewing this video. This was one of your masterpieces. This video will continue to engage viewers especially the fact that the Century 3 Mall has to be probably one of the most explored dead or abandoned malls. It’s up there. People are still curious about this mall. And the fact that it’s in the demolition stage. It's a sad fate for C3 Mall and people are reminiscing about their time there. Many content creators on You Tube have created videos of this mall. It’s a beautiful aesthetically designed mall from one of the great architects of that time period. Who can resist watching videos of C3 Mall? IMR! I couldn’t. I kept coming back to this video several times and felt the intense desolation of this once thriving building that had life in its beginning during the 80s and 90s. And then at the time of your exploration, it started to perish, clinging to its life but with no signs of life left to live. The classical musical tune in the beginning really fits in with its desolate state. Thank you Sal for putting this masterpiece for us viewers and future generations to see . To see how this mall was once a cherished cultural icon that reflected the prosperity of the 80s and 90s when people went and gathered at the malls. Sad to see many malls have died and many today are in the brink of dying. Peace be with you Sal.

  • @gregboone6158
    @gregboone6158 5 лет назад +34

    As a person that used to work in malls for yrs. I feel sad when I see something like this. What else can I say.

    • @good151
      @good151 3 года назад

      I agree. I started in the food court then moved on to Gimbels. Its heart breaking to watch.

  • @beulahboi
    @beulahboi 6 лет назад +41

    This place NEEDS to be an indoor Water park/Go Kart track/Playground for adults. Would be a huge money maker especially in the winter.

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад +1

      I’d pay dearly to patronize this place.

    • @haydensteder7348
      @haydensteder7348 6 лет назад

      The problem with that is that kennywood is right near this place, so it would cause competition that kennywood would inevitably win.

    • @beulahboi
      @beulahboi 6 лет назад +5

      I disagree, especially because Kennywood is closed half the year. That's like saying Sandcastle wouldn't work. It has :)

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 5 лет назад

      there was a huge indoor park called Old Chicago. It failed. Being not far from 4 million people, too.

    • @randyhutchinson9910
      @randyhutchinson9910 5 лет назад

      beulahboi yup

  • @vids4791
    @vids4791 4 года назад +23

    I had a piece of pizza at the Italian Oven, the last food vendor in the "food court" right before it closed.

    • @simondaniel4028
      @simondaniel4028 3 года назад +1

      Italian Village Pizza! Oh man that was the highlight of the mall when I was a kid. Still a few locations around PA. Squirrel Hill location is great, and McKnight too!

    • @softuniverse7771
      @softuniverse7771 2 года назад +1

      @@simondaniel4028 i can taste it. their sicilian slices were great

  • @BBQDad463
    @BBQDad463 Год назад +2

    I am 71. We used to go Christmas shopping at Century III Mall. It was quite a vibrant place to shop. It was so much better than the old days of walking up and down city streets at night, in the cold, the wind, the rain, and the snow. I hated trying to cross streets jammed with traffic. In the mall, it was safe and warm, one could take one's time, sit on a bench and rest for a minute.
    It is sad to see such properties, built at such great expense, reduced to hollowed-out, derelict hulks, waiting to be demolished.
    What a waste!

  • @chucksluver84
    @chucksluver84 6 лет назад +381

    I just don't understand what is so wrong with filming dead dying malls. We just preserving history and nothing else.

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад +73

      Exactly! But most mall owners/management fully understand that their malls are decaying, and I guess it’s an effort to portray *only* the material they advertise. They only want the public to see their website, commercials and PR materials, which were created when the mall was most likely at its prime. But...why entice someone to a mall that, in reality, is dark and unsafe?
      We all produce these videos to bring light to the subject and maybe...just maybe...make the mall owners do something about it.

    • @GeneStarwindAMVS
      @GeneStarwindAMVS 6 лет назад +31

      The thing is that the malls look at it being negatively affecting them by showing the mall in decline. It hurts them from getting future tenants and it puts it in a bad light. While I do see it as preserving and remembering a place where many of us have gone before, they don't see it like that. Some malls says its an invasion of privacy for the workers and the people shopping at the mall to film as you don't have permission to film there. I have a feeling Marley Station is heading the same way. It's losing more and more stores as it goes a long. I don't think mall management cares.
      Then again most of these business don't care and try to get away with charging top dollar when amazon, target, and walmart are beating you on prices. BestBuy even price matches now and that's the only reason they're surviving.

    • @goopah
      @goopah 6 лет назад +15

      We've got two old malls here in Bismarck (Kirkwood opened in 1969 and Gateway around 1980), and while Kirkwood is not thriving, it is doing pretty well, with very few vacant spaces. But Gateway has been struggling for years now. Amazingly, because of their valiant efforts, they've been filling their spots with various doctors' offices and other non-mall associated shops, and they are staying alive. They even managed to stick a new top facade around the whole mall, and re-tar the entire parking lot, which can't have been inexpensive for them.

    • @BroccoliBeefed
      @BroccoliBeefed 6 лет назад +14

      Sal , They won't do anything about it. It's like trying to sell or rent a home no one wants. Best thing to do is demolish it and put homes, hotels or office buildings there. Indoor malls are no longer en vogue. They are perfect places for public sex, if you have that fetish

    • @scorpion8rage
      @scorpion8rage 6 лет назад +40

      It's not public sex if no one is there lol.

  • @Blahbevava
    @Blahbevava 5 лет назад +411

    Dead Malls = Proof few people have any money anymore to go out and just buy random things for fun. 80s and 90s were the golden years for consumers. Where do people "hang out" anymore? Everyone just seems to live inside now days on their screens. It's sad and disturbing.

    • @natehawkins2910
      @natehawkins2910 5 лет назад +28

      Mr. Extreme So right! In late ‘89-‘97 Our local New Towne Mall was bustling, fun and colorful with miles of Neon tubes and packed with people. I’ll never forget how fun that place was. Just beautiful with all of the colorful neon signs and clean appearance! Such a shame that everything today is starch and without character or pride.

    • @ewfuoywoef32pri
      @ewfuoywoef32pri 5 лет назад +14

      @@natehawkins2910 Time to turn inwards, and fix that forgotten town center. Malls were a ruse.

    • @mikechermonitz3065
      @mikechermonitz3065 5 лет назад +5

      Right? Or......ebay

    • @davis6123
      @davis6123 5 лет назад +9

      In Central Indiana, malls are still the go to spot for high schoolers and college kids. With all the wealth north of Indianapolis, the malls still do very well.

    • @eduardoBR1991
      @eduardoBR1991 5 лет назад +9

      It's funny, but I kinda miss going shop for my computer parts. Testing the stuff before actually deciding to buy. The only way to do this today, is if I'm buying a car, which doesn't happen often since I take my time before exchanging cars.

  • @jbrandan5605
    @jbrandan5605 4 года назад +4

    Great Vid - Thanks! The Pittsburgh area has always been my home and I had just graduated high school when this mall officially opened in 1979. It's hard to believe that it is (at least mostly) gone now.

  • @kristensorensen2219
    @kristensorensen2219 5 лет назад +377

    These are traded like bad baseball cards. With the nationwide homeless disaster these places could be home to these people. The elderly would benefit from living in a giant indoor community where there is indoor space to walk and socialize. A new kind of community could be invented to use these spaces.

    • @Lynx112
      @Lynx112 5 лет назад +15

      @Rose Treiger they like to hurt people and take their things? Homeless aren't criminals, criminals are criminals so until every homeless person Has been on trial for something they may or may not do, same as everyone else may or may not, for example, shoplift, nobody should judge an unfortunately growing number of people by the actions of a few. They ask for money and by lord do they get a hard time, one lady I spoke to got kicked around by 4 guys because they thought she was a lone homeless guy, like that makes it ok, and it was entertaining to them. She wasn't a drunk or an addict she had fallen on hard times since universal credit was introduced, as have many people. It would be OK for either homeless or elderly not both, or better neither. It's just that seeing a huge building going to complete waste and people draining more money into it gives me the chills when I walk past so many homeless people daily. Think of all the other things that could have been done with the building, rather than keeping throwing money away on having it stood there unused. It's sick!

    • @bochillin6712
      @bochillin6712 5 лет назад +17

      You might want to start a chain of kindness just pick one off the street and have them move in with you

    • @MediocreRebel
      @MediocreRebel 5 лет назад +8

      I was literally just thinking about it being repurposed as a living space too. Too bad though, because the people in power only care about transferring our funds into their swiss bank accounts.

    • @charlotteskiftun753
      @charlotteskiftun753 5 лет назад +2

      Agreed....very poor management of resouces

    • @davewyler1417
      @davewyler1417 5 лет назад +9

      And who pays for it and maintains the large building? Time for a reality check, use some common sense. Nothing like making a problem worse. Geez

  • @jeffreythompson7110
    @jeffreythompson7110 6 лет назад +29

    I like how you give us a history on the property. it’s nice to hear the details. thanks .

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад +4

      The history is my first priority. Anything that I can dig up on the place I visit is just as interesting to me as the place itself. Thanks so much for watching! Stay tuned, lots more coming!

  • @mangoldm
    @mangoldm 6 лет назад +175

    I was in high school when this mall was built. It was so futuristic. I loved to go there to buy Gary Numan tapes and play video games.

    • @unit2655
      @unit2655 6 лет назад +9

      Michael Mangold You Sir, have a great taste in music. #tubewayarmy

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 6 лет назад +2

      Michael Mangold who the hell is Gary Numan???

    • @unit2655
      @unit2655 6 лет назад +9

      Anonymous Libertarian look up the video "Cars" on RUclips. He's most popular for that. He was New Wave/techno.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 6 лет назад +16

      "Here in my car,
      I feel safest of all.
      I can lock all my doors,
      it's the only way to live.
      In cars."

    • @brotzmannsax
      @brotzmannsax 6 лет назад +3

      I would never admit it to anyone if I bought a Gary Numan tape, crappy taste!

  • @slipvelocity33
    @slipvelocity33 2 года назад +3

    My grandfather used to take my family there in the 80s and early 90s.. was such a nice place

  • @robertholtz
    @robertholtz 5 лет назад +26

    Good job on researching the history. It adds much more richness to the visuals. Thanks for bringing it to us.

  • @robinvoskampbianco7335
    @robinvoskampbianco7335 5 лет назад +4

    I live very close to here and remember when the "fires fell down the mountain". The Mall was always packed, back when everything was open. Thanks for the memories!!

  • @budstephens7239
    @budstephens7239 5 лет назад +35

    Dammm if you are not a professional film maker you outta be !! Perfect video , I’m a trucker for over 40 years and have delivered to thousands of places and still remember bringing a load of floor tile when they we’re doing one of those big stores... damm that back ground sound track was creeping me out !!!!

    • @sal
      @sal  5 лет назад +1

      Thanks Bud!! Tons more content on the way!

    • @johnmartin2510
      @johnmartin2510 5 лет назад +7

      yeah that apocalyptic ambient music was awesomely creepy...

  • @XInfantryman
    @XInfantryman 3 года назад +1

    I'm 53 years old, I grew up in malls like this, they were so much fun to go to and hang out in with your friends. Good memories. Kids today are missing out. Nothing better than the 70s, 80s and 90s. Everyone lived outside, loving life.
    Now the streets are empty and everything is done online. Easy but sad.

  • @boudreux9318
    @boudreux9318 3 года назад +1

    I used to go there so much as a kid in the 80's, that a lot of the dreams I have today,.. I still find myself wandering around that mall jam packed with people on a Friday or Saturday night. It was a great place. I'm shocked at how fast it came and went.

  • @davidturner2113
    @davidturner2113 6 лет назад +160

    That has happened to a lot of shopping centers in the country. There isn't enough customers to support them anymore. Online shopping has hurt them a lot. But when I was a kid we didn't have online shopping and the malls were full. Our country still had a lot of manufacturing jobs and the steel industry was still strong. All of that is gone now, it's too bad. Some economists have said our economy has shrunk a lot since the 1970's and stagnated; and much of it is never coming back. That is why there are so many people with out jobs or low paying jobs. We have actually been in a depression for 35 years in this country. Of course you will never get the government to acknowledge this or the politicians.

    • @natehawkins2910
      @natehawkins2910 5 лет назад +16

      David Turner Agreed!! I remember by fruit of the looms saying “made in USA” on the tag and pretty much everything else! It’s so sad what the globalist agenda has done to the USA. I miss the late 80’s and 90’s so bad!!

    • @leonidas14775
      @leonidas14775 5 лет назад +5

      Wages haven't kept up with inflation and department stores now have to compete with people who flip stuff from alibaba and DHgate online.

    • @melgon25
      @melgon25 5 лет назад +7

      Gone are the days of people coming out of high school and getting high paying manufacturing jobs (or otherwise). Good jobs to support families and grow the economy. Trades are the way to go. My husband talks of the shortage all the time. 3-5 yr apprenticeships. But all you say is so true!

    • @generalkickass6385
      @generalkickass6385 5 лет назад

      You spoke true facts

    • @chaddeez8446
      @chaddeez8446 5 лет назад +8

      America has consumed itself. We're living in a different era now. As a kid you keep thinking things will get better with time and age like there's no stopping us, but things have really changed in the 21st century and especially since 9/11.

  • @sharonoffl1349
    @sharonoffl1349 5 лет назад +10

    This was a beautiful, thriving, busy mall where I shopped for many years. How sad.

  • @chrisburgess8690
    @chrisburgess8690 4 года назад +1

    I grew up in the area and remember when that place opened. When I was very young the slag hill still glowed at night. Seeing this open, across from Children’s Palace toy store, was amazing. I had never seen anything so huge and impressive before. It is mystical and sad to watch this. I would never have imagined this fate back then. Sad. But thanks for being interested and sharing.

  • @dondep
    @dondep 4 года назад +1

    I just finished this one and it started your later, longer video about the mall and I'm just dropping a note to say thanks for helping to keep the memories of civilization alive for future generations, as well as for our own entertainment and enjoyment. when I was 12 years old I went to what was then the largest mall in the US, Park City in Lancaster PA, and it was a dream then. I was given $20 allowance to spend and it was like a dozen Christmases all rolled up into one. Later in life I managed several kiosks at another Mall a rather large one near Washington DC. In some ways it's a good thing that people don't need to go to a mall to shop, but in other ways we really miss them.

  • @ginnywilliams8159
    @ginnywilliams8159 5 лет назад +29

    Loved this! Crazy maze mall. It’s fascinating how detailed and large they made these old malls. Great video!

  • @calithunder
    @calithunder 5 лет назад +5

    I have so much appreciation for people like you who help preserve history :)

  • @carolinecook2922
    @carolinecook2922 3 года назад +1

    I hv such great memories at Century 3 Mall! Moved to Pittsburgh from Texas in 1986 and worked at kaufmanns, hornes, lazarus, gimbels, among alot of other companies in this mall. Sad to see it closed! This place was alwayssss busy! Esp with early morning walkers, which I actually saved a elderly mam from choking! I got discovered in this mall & became a model for 15 years as well. Took my kids here on weekends.Had great times there. Simon always closes their malls! Its about $$$. Thank god I hv fotos there.

  • @jacobbalistreri3915
    @jacobbalistreri3915 4 года назад +2

    I live a few streets away from this mall. You can actually see it from my house. The entire mall is shut down except for the JCPenny. It truly is a miracle that this store is even open still but it is. It seems to get pretty busy too. The Kmart at the very beginning of this video on route 51 is also out of business. Many people are wondering what they are gonna do with century 3 mall but no one really knows so it is just weird to see something so big just completely go to waste.

  • @chuckdieselkicksdisks2380
    @chuckdieselkicksdisks2380 6 лет назад +40

    You did your homework and you did an awesome job thanks again. Have gone to this mall since I was very little

  • @CarlNeimeyer
    @CarlNeimeyer 6 лет назад +5

    That last beautiful view was my everyday view I took for granted 18 years ago when I would walk out of Sears to the food court for lunch.

    • @BroccoliBeefed
      @BroccoliBeefed 6 лет назад

      Carl Neimeyer , Someome actually shopped at Sears? 😂

  • @lindabrittner5062
    @lindabrittner5062 4 года назад +1

    I was at Century III Mall during opening weekend with a friend from high school. It was huge, beautiful and so fancy. They had live birds, foliage, koi fish in pools and a many good restaurants. I shopped there frequently throughout the 80s and 90s until moving out of state in 2002. This was THE happening place to be for many years. Sad to see it empty and in disrepair.

  • @davidmosleysr.5799
    @davidmosleysr.5799 3 года назад +1

    This was the place to be especially when I was in high school, I told my son that this place was booming and he didn’t believe me but those of you who witnessed it back in the day know how this place was.

  • @esesenordenegro2064
    @esesenordenegro2064 5 лет назад +31

    These kind of buildings, abandoned malls, could be used as futuristic places for movies...
    Or recycled buildings for offices.

    • @good151
      @good151 3 года назад

      In April 2018, filming took place in the old Macy's Furniture Gallery wing for the Netflix original series Mindhunter.

    • @cherylsmith4826
      @cherylsmith4826 2 года назад

      I think apartments or houses reconfigured into the existing space- I would live in a mall- never mow grass or shovel snow- little ponds & plants in the common space- hell yeah

    • @MillerVanDotTV
      @MillerVanDotTV 2 года назад

      Tear them down and put solar panels fields there or plant trees.

  • @goldwinger5434
    @goldwinger5434 5 лет назад +139

    Malls are their own worst enemies. If I go to a mall where I live or go to one 2,000 miles away, the stores are exactly the same. The malls actively worked to drive out the interesting local shops.

    • @prodbycams2130
      @prodbycams2130 5 лет назад +9

      Looks like the interesting local shops got the last laugh. Malls aren't what they used to be.

    • @redriveral2764
      @redriveral2764 5 лет назад +17

      Interesting to watch the progression. Downtown shopping was destroyed by regional malls, now malls are being destroyed by internet shopping.

    • @Geno2733
      @Geno2733 5 лет назад +3

      @@redriveral2764 ....And Retail Cities popping up around the corpses of the malls.

    • @belindaphillips2779
      @belindaphillips2779 4 года назад +1

      @@prodbycams2130 we have beautiful malls in Houston Tx

    • @belindaphillips2779
      @belindaphillips2779 4 года назад +1

      @Hope Ful no Amazon hasnt taken over yet

  • @Kittydoc90
    @Kittydoc90 5 лет назад +54

    In 1981, my husband, a freshly minted ensign in the USN, was stationed in Pittsburgh for 6 months. During that time, he purchased my engagement ring, 1/6 carat, at the Century lll Mall-the best quality stone he could afford rather than the largest. And then he proposed to me, a complete surprise as we’d only been dating for 5 months and "weren’t going to get serious" since he was going to be leaving for Pittsburgh. In fact, the day he proposed, I initially thought he’d come home to break up with me. We spent the first month of our marriage in "Pissburgh"-January 1982, the climate was lousy as was the general temperament of the citizens-economic times were very hard back then-and pollution was horrible. Melting snow turned into black-yes, black-ooze on the roads. Let’s just say I was glad when we left.
    Century lll Mall, built on that slag heap, was very close to our home and it was a place to go to walk around.
    The mall hasn’t survived but our 37 year marriage has-he’s still my best friend, ally, and love, and I dare say he feels the same way about me.
    Thank you for posting your exploration and including such a thorough history of the place. It’s brought back soooooo many memories.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 5 лет назад +3

      I wonder if the locals would mind a pollution now, if it brings the lost jobs back. I think I know the answer.
      Congratulations on your marriage, people like you should teach nowadays women how to behave. Although, I don't think anything will help at this point.

    • @elwin38
      @elwin38 5 лет назад +2

      Love conquers all..💖🧡🚢

    • @Kittydoc90
      @Kittydoc90 5 лет назад

      elwin38
      😊

    • @flamingapplepie1
      @flamingapplepie1 5 лет назад +1

      Som eOne we still have lots of jobs here they’ve just changed from industrial kind of jobs. We have lots of good hospitals here for example. People all go to Ross park mall because it’s the nicest, safest, and on the bus line. Ofc Ross park just lost its sears so we’ll see if that’s a bad sign for it...

    • @LiveINtheGood53
      @LiveINtheGood53 4 года назад

      Kittydoc90.... sorry for you but at least you were there when the Steelers were still awesome and were playing championship football!

  • @BelleReign1
    @BelleReign1 4 года назад +3

    I like how descriptive this video is. Most abandoned mall videos just explore without much explanation.
    Thank you.

    • @sal
      @sal  4 года назад +1

      Thanks Rachel! I take pride in my research...although I may revisit some malls or sites, and for these “sequels” I may not recite the history since it was done in the first one...

  • @enroachingentei3474
    @enroachingentei3474 6 лет назад +8

    2015: We went to century III mall. I was with my parents and it was a really nice mall. It’s a shame how much that this mall has changed in just 3 years.

  • @SDChargers93
    @SDChargers93 5 лет назад +5

    Man oh man good ol route 51 u was driving down. Good times at this mall. Where I bought my plain tees. Then in 2016 ish I bought old games and discounted jerseys from the champs upstairs and where the smoke shop was. Was where the old retro gaming store was. This was the last mall me and my mom visited before she died , my last good Christmas I believe it was 2013 or 2014 she bought me a Blue XXL Kobe Bryant jersey. That was my last good Christmas before I didnt have any for a while. I can truly go on and on about my stories about century 3 mall. I miss this place so much

    • @XDM10
      @XDM10 5 лет назад

      I feel u. Sad 2 see it like that. Early 2000s I was in that place 2-3 times a week. A lot of memories there.

    • @SDChargers93
      @SDChargers93 5 лет назад

      @@XDM10 yeah bro so many memories. Especially the pizza shop in the food court . Always nice and courteous

  • @LadyErynn
    @LadyErynn 5 лет назад +1

    This is so incredibly sad to see. We used to beg our parents to take us to Century III during Christmas time. It was always packed with people. As I became a teenager, this was the place I always went to shop because they had better stores then my hometown did. It’s so sad to see it vacant and rotting away.

  • @loriloo1039
    @loriloo1039 5 лет назад +8

    Malls were a huge part of my childhood. My first job was in a mall. Thank you for the footage and memories!

  • @guitarmdpittsburgh7139
    @guitarmdpittsburgh7139 6 лет назад +17

    When I was a kid in the mid 1950's, it was a big treat to drive out to West Mifflin and watch the steel companies dump slag off the hill where Century III was later build.

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад

      I love this memory

  • @realazduffman
    @realazduffman 6 лет назад +11

    That glass elevator at 10:49, you have no idea what a big deal that was when the place opened. Everyone had to ride it.

  • @larrybruce4856
    @larrybruce4856 5 лет назад +1

    Such a beautiful shopping mall with many great stores and a past history going to waste and falling to ruins many malls in America are. Hopefully, many of these beautiful malls can be saved and another time of shopping and looking into business windows will come back. Thank you for this tour of Century III Mall.

  • @loritesty6036
    @loritesty6036 5 лет назад +1

    So sad because I remember how busy this mall actually was. It would be a treat to go to the mall shopping for the day. So many places to get to chose to eat at. Now to see it like this breaks my heart. The last time I was there maybe 4 years ago, there were maybe 5-6 stores still opened in the mall.

  • @scrapycoll
    @scrapycoll 6 лет назад +8

    It is a shame. Was a beautiful mall at one time. Sad to see all malls struggling partially due to online. It is expensive to rent mall space and pay employees. However you don't see cheaper prices when ordering online from the warehouses.

  • @headiero
    @headiero 6 лет назад +5

    I grew up in this mall. I was there all the time in the 1980's with my cousins. We would get so excited to go. Thank you for the research and history you put into this video. I'm so depressed now😥

    • @headiero
      @headiero 6 лет назад

      FFwF011 I moved to another state 20 years ago.

    • @headiero
      @headiero 6 лет назад

      FFwF011 It really is. In it's heyday it was a Goliath of a mall. Are you from the Pittsburgh area, or have ever visited Century III?

  • @BlueCollar850
    @BlueCollar850 5 лет назад +23

    This place is a graveyard of the American Dream. I try to imagine the history of this building. The families Christmas shopping. The teenagers playing in the arcades. Young women buying makeup and shoes. One day this place will be a ghost; a reminder of what used to be.

    • @MrMusicTop40
      @MrMusicTop40 4 года назад +1

      Yup just like Rolling Acres in Akron Ohio became...very sad.

    • @mamachicken1548
      @mamachicken1548 4 года назад +1

      It already is a ghost

    • @davidcribbs367
      @davidcribbs367 4 года назад +2

      Yup, spent alot of teenage nights hanging out at Century 3 in early 90s

    • @good151
      @good151 3 года назад +1

      It was an amazing place to be. The mall decorated for Christmas was breathtaking. I spent many hours in the third floor arcade as well as the record stores. Kids today will never know the many hours you could spend going through album after album or, waiting in line for concert tickets haha Century III Mall is missed by many people. We do still have Monroeville Mall, where Dawn of the Dead, was filmed. It still seems to be doing well though the ice skating rink is no longer there.

  • @sallyyotz3995
    @sallyyotz3995 5 лет назад +11

    After the birth of my second daughter, I would pack my girls up and we would go to the mall so I could walk and get exercise. It is really sad to see it dead like this. :(

    • @sal
      @sal  5 лет назад +2

      That’s a beautiful memory!

  • @natalielbeauty4266
    @natalielbeauty4266 6 лет назад +17

    I worked in this mall at Regis Salons. When I worked there it was on the decline and they eventually closed us and moved us to a salon in a near by strip mall. I remember the ceilings leaking and when you would call management they would ask if you wanted a tarp or a bucket. We knew it was going down hill and we would close eventually. I do miss working there though.

    • @spuriouseffect
      @spuriouseffect 6 лет назад +1

      nataliebeauty What year was that?

    • @macadonis9242
      @macadonis9242 6 лет назад

      Hi cutie

    • @darringraham2613
      @darringraham2613 6 лет назад +1

      natalielbeauty best times of my life was working in the mall

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 5 лет назад

      If you have a problem like this in a rental, you can deduct it off the rent. At least in Illinois and a residential.

  • @melgon25
    @melgon25 5 лет назад +17

    Great video....positives: calm nice voice, no swearing. Swearings not a huge deal if it’s not excessive but I can’t let my kids watch then. I can let my kids watch this video. Thank you. That mall is eye opening. I live not far from Milwaukee WI. Our mall is oh so similar to that mall. Smaller. One story. So many stores closed, things blocked off, access to mall closed off from stores. Stores opening up as more of a separate from the mall thing. Really too bad. The good thing is, someone bought it, they are doing a ton of work. Got all the kiosks out. Are working on getting the “no name” stores out. I have my strong doubts it can truly be revived but seeing malls like this make me thankful they’re trying I guess. Thanks for a nice video.

    • @sal
      @sal  5 лет назад

      Hey Mel! The only piece of mine that includes swearing is my Forest Fair Pt. 2 video, and after the first ten minutes, it’s back to normal. My narration will never include excessive swearing if any. Many apologies, but it’s a heads up for you and the kiddos. Thanks for watching!

  • @jsemail894
    @jsemail894 3 года назад +2

    Worked there in the 90’s; some of the best times of my life. All the old timers would talk about how it was built on a slag pile and that it was doomed to collapse.

  • @---wl2pq
    @---wl2pq 4 года назад +1

    i grew up around this mall. i even knew exactly what roads you were driving in the intro. this mall was my childhood but i watched it fall apart over the years. it’s so eerie to see how abandoned it is. i haven’t seen the inside in years. the only open store is j.c. penney. i think. i guess things come full circle. i appreciated this video, i feel really uncomfy now tho, to see something you loved fall apart.

  • @HeatherExplores19
    @HeatherExplores19 6 лет назад +386

    This mall was beautiful when I was a kid, especially around Christmas time. :(

    • @sds3306
      @sds3306 6 лет назад +7

      Heather Sparkles
      What happened to it?

    • @museumandtravel
      @museumandtravel 6 лет назад +2

      YES

    • @melvinbennett444
      @melvinbennett444 6 лет назад +26

      @ mrt57....this mall didn't open until 1980 or so. Hornes dept store became an Anchor in 1986. What killed this mall and most malls, are the roving gangs of savages, which keep real purchasers away. And then the roving gangs of savages steal like crazy. People don't want to face up to the facts.

    • @deathcheater9303
      @deathcheater9303 6 лет назад +14

      Heather Sparkles I remember being excited as a kid to visit this mall.

    • @melvinbennett444
      @melvinbennett444 6 лет назад +9

      @ mrt57rn. The mall is in Allegheny County and there were no farms around that area for tens of miles. You are one big fat liar. And like there is a world of difference between 1979 & 1980. Most of the stores in this mall did not open up until 1980 moron. And I lived within 10 minutes of the this mall. So YOU STFU LYING POS/

  • @sisterlita262
    @sisterlita262 2 года назад +1

    This just popped up in my recommended, can't believe it! I spent alot of time in the 80's and 90's shopping and hanging out at Century III mall. I have such fond memories from my childhood and teenage yrs at this mall. It was beautiful, and so busy! It really makes me sad to see its decline.

  • @SigmaSheepdog
    @SigmaSheepdog 9 месяцев назад +1

    This past August, I deliberately drove past Century III Mall to check it out, and it is totally closed and looks very apocalypic. Though I no longer live in the area, I remember when the mall was being built. I spent a lot of time in that mall in the early 80's and it amazes me to see it now. Ironically, I passed an Amazon truck on the road along side of the mall.

  • @412foto
    @412foto 6 лет назад +15

    Pittsburgh area has 5 very large malls...Century III is obviously a goner as shown in your video. Monroeville has quite a few empty store fronts and has had issues with violence so they are struggling. Mall of Robinson is in a busy retail area and doing decently. Ross Park Mall has super high end fashion and other brands like Nordstrom, LL Bean, etc although just lost Sears but getting a Lego store too. And then some geniuses thought they'd build yet another model and didn't see the writing on the wall that malls were declining...so the massive Pittsburgh Mills mall since with under 50% occupancy as well.

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад +3

      Pittsburgh Mills is my next destination!!! After I revisit Century 3 :)

    • @cathywills97
      @cathywills97 6 лет назад +1

      I used to go to Pgh Mills frequently. I hate to see what stores are left.

    • @cathywills97
      @cathywills97 6 лет назад

      @@sal oh please do!!

    • @dampergoldenrod4156
      @dampergoldenrod4156 5 лет назад

      @Atheos B. Sapien it was built to get property taxes to pay for School Employees and government employees that's why these malls are built

  • @neightneight1280
    @neightneight1280 6 лет назад +4

    Documenting the decaying cathedrals of consumer CULTure is a worthy endeavor, sir. The vintage- audio makes it Art. Damn nostalgic for those who grew up around such grandiose places; I have such mixed feelings seeing a local hangout spot nearing extinction.. Thanks for the share!

  • @Boccaccio1811
    @Boccaccio1811 4 года назад +10

    5:56 - you can’t have the true mall atmosphere without a bird flying around inside =)

    • @sal
      @sal  4 года назад +5

      Sooo true. God I miss this mall...

    • @Boccaccio1811
      @Boccaccio1811 4 года назад +1

      Sal - Yeah, I guess I should be grateful that the malls I go to are still open. Then again, I live by Woodfield Mall which is one of the largest in the US, so hopefully it’s not going anywhere anytime soon

    • @tobiesky2185
      @tobiesky2185 2 года назад +1

      You really want to take this all the way back, Pittsburgh style? Nothing says 1980s Pittsburgh like a bird eating dropped popcorn off the floor of the Hills’ snack bar

  • @KCAlden
    @KCAlden 2 года назад +1

    Slipping around security and running from them at the end made this video that much more exciting. Thanks, great video!

  • @treatngizzy
    @treatngizzy 6 лет назад +17

    The poor place was going downhill when I bought my wife's engagement ring back in 2000 or so.. seeing it now is wild. I pass it from time to time and wonder if there is anything still in there . The music playing in a totally empty space that big with all the echos is creepy and cool ! Needs to be a huge haunted house this year ;)

    • @greggreg4072
      @greggreg4072 5 лет назад

      Cenobyte The poor place is sexy as boy butts

  • @haydensteder7348
    @haydensteder7348 6 лет назад +6

    This was absolutely amazing! Finally! A documentary on century III!

  • @cdell261
    @cdell261 4 года назад +1

    I was practically raised in this mall. My aunt took me here a lot. I would sometimes do my homework in the food court, then we would eat Italian Village Pizza, followed by walking around. Sometimes, I would get a toy at KB Toys or the Dollar Store. 😊

  • @christopherminni1323
    @christopherminni1323 5 лет назад +1

    I live right between Philadelphia, PA and Trenton, NJ and never heard about this place ever. Great video Bud. I know it's not that old but it was awesome. Thanks for sharing

  • @laurieguzman5577
    @laurieguzman5577 5 лет назад +23

    Thanks for being a risk taker! I haven’t been there for years since moving away in 87. I am so sad to see the condition of this once beautiful Mall! I still think it’s worth saving/restoring. Thanks for sharing!

    • @usaturnuranus
      @usaturnuranus 5 лет назад +1

      I was thinking along the same lines - the interior looks like it's been pretty well taken care of.

  • @Thghjfghjf
    @Thghjfghjf 5 лет назад +15

    This was my mall growing up, it’s so sad this mall used to be beautiful

  • @chrispaw1
    @chrispaw1 4 года назад +2

    Great video. I especially like the background stories you give, makes it far more interesting. Thanks

  • @ApplesauceNinja
    @ApplesauceNinja 2 года назад +1

    This was such a fantastic video, and I love how you used haunting audio to make it all the more atmospheric. Yes, malls are dropping left and right, but while from a nostalgic standpoint it's sad, with the rise and current dominance of the online everything world in which we live, one cannot be surprised. I work in a mall anchor store and can tell you that while our mall is still quite alive, I'd be lying if I said it was also well. The last time I took a count, our mall has 10-12 vacant storefronts, and many of the big name retailers abandoned ship years back and have seen their former spaces become occupied by small, no name junk stores. Of our 4 anchors, only 2 remain. One, MM Cohn, was demolished, and the other was Sears, which closed shop and has been replaced by a discount furniture outlet. Malls just really aren't the viable business model they once were, to understate it. About 5 years ago a massive open air mall opened near my city, and at the time much ado was made of its arrival, but now more than half of its spaces sit empty. Starbucks recently closed their location there as well. I remember a time when malls held a magical charm for me and many others, but I'd wager to bet within 10-20 years there will scarcely remain any operating in even a limited capacity. The mall in which I work is a Simon property, and despite having defaulted on their other local mall and big retailers being unwilling to return, the property group remains stubbornly unwilling to lower their obscene rental rates to attract quality retailers. It boggles the mind.

  • @stevenboswell220
    @stevenboswell220 6 лет назад +84

    YOUR VOICE IS PERFECT FOR THIS

  • @laurenoneil
    @laurenoneil 4 года назад +3

    Dude! Amazing work!!

    • @sal
      @sal  4 года назад

      Hey thanks. You’ll love the sequel. Go watch ExLog 36

  • @jenniferbaldini3527
    @jenniferbaldini3527 3 года назад +1

    I worked at Century for 5 years in the mid 80's. That was such a great time for the mall. One thing I never see mentioned is the 'Scotto's' "pizza connection". For about 10 years from the mid 70's to the mid 80's, the mafia in Sicily began importing heroin from Turkey into the US, involving Mafia families in this country to distribute the heroin thru pizza stores. Scotto at Century was 1 of those store fronts to move heroine. After the smuggling ring was busted, 'Scotto's' pizza was changed to 'The Italian Village'. Just a quick story to add to Centurys history.

  • @theexpert8163
    @theexpert8163 5 лет назад +2

    WHEN I THINK OF THE MONEY , MAN POWER , JOBS LOST , AND PLANNING THAT WENT IN TO BUILDING THIS ONCE MAGNIFICENT MALL I GET SICK TO MY STOMACH , LITERALLY !!!

    • @marieliesbetwellekens3089
      @marieliesbetwellekens3089 5 лет назад +1

      I can understandyour feeling about it ........ How many mansions but so beautiful swimmingpools and other luxury etc etc etc and other invests are made ....... but, for anuinkown reason, are left behind empty ........ later overgrown by nature after many years ....... or / and destroyed by graffitti and breaking down by unknown people who visit / break in to those buildings ........ or putting in fire by those vandalism ....... :( :(

    • @theexpert8163
      @theexpert8163 5 лет назад

      @@marieliesbetwellekens3089 LOTS AND LOTS WE'LL NEVER EVEN HEAR ABOUT I'M SURE !!

  • @injuredtabletennisplayer1474
    @injuredtabletennisplayer1474 4 года назад +3

    This is so sad. Used to go there in late 80’s with my family when I lived in wheeling,wva. It was a happy time.

  • @cindyburrell8426
    @cindyburrell8426 5 лет назад +7

    I love Pittsburgh,I hated it when I had to move,it will always be in my heart and soul😓

    • @ednaperhach2769
      @ednaperhach2769 5 лет назад

      Yes it has a way of doing that. I live in Elizabeth . 💔💔

  • @FallicIdol
    @FallicIdol 3 года назад +2

    There are several channels handling dying and dead malls, but your is by far the best. Your research and delivery are amazing. This is such a fascinating and sad topic, though. I hate seeing the loss of jobs and dreams.

    • @sal
      @sal  3 года назад

      Thank you for the kind words!!

  • @rrk426
    @rrk426 4 года назад +1

    Adding the old ad audio in the background adds such a cool atmosphere that makes me shiver, nice idea

  • @rrho6701
    @rrho6701 6 лет назад +18

    This mall is dying because of the lack of vision of the owners. As you toured the place, idea after idea came to mind. First of all, there are significant universities in the area, not the least of which are Carnegie Mellon and University of Pittsburgh. Then the high-end / high tech businesses, such as Uber and Google. The high schools are not yet completely over-run, and operate with reasonable budgets, due to working and caring parents. People in the Western Pennsylvania still carry vestiges of the "old ways", where they care about themselves, their neighbors, their communities and their country. The property is also in fairly close proximity to tourist draws, such as the aforementioned Kennywood Amusement Park, Sand Castle water park, and the Pittsburgh proper attractions, like the museums, sports venues, etc. I could go on. This is a vanishingly rare combination, with which to start a commercial community.
    To start with, the mall is not in too bad of shape. This is, in part, due to the absence of the "roving gangs", and the like. It is somewhat out of the way, but this can be used to advantage.
    If I were in charge of the development plans (heh heh), I think I'd start with robotic competitions. This leverages Google, Uber and the schools. Area drone races, bot battles, and connected LAN gaming would bring a wide variety of intelligent and tech savy people, and be completely unattractive to those "roving miscreants" that y'all are afraid of. These competitions must be supported by refreshment suppliers, whose infrastructure is already in place. Then there are the tech retailers, such as Micro Center, Frys, maybe even a resurrected Radio Shack (how appropriate). Then comes the screen printers / clothing vendors, Shops for the significant others' of the competitors, the movie reopens for much the same reason.
    Then the maker space, and the various "experiences", exhibitions of culture, fantasy, sci-fi..., now decorate the place in a futuristic, scifi motif. The various levels suggest a space station, or a Disney-like future city.
    The space is there, the customers are there, all that's lacking is the innovative spark.
    Old mall shopping is gone. A few culture venues, such as the open-air specialty shops and restaurants, bars and boutiques are popping up at places like Market Square and the Lowe's waterfront. New tech venues and indoor walkabouts have not yet arrived. Here's the opportunity.
    This could be a destination; an area attraction. It can be developed organically, with little investment required. All it need is TLC and a vision.

    • @sal
      @sal  6 лет назад

      Now *this* is forward thinking!

    • @davidweihe6052
      @davidweihe6052 6 лет назад

      The problem is, as you pointed out, that the nearby Waterworks Mall sucked the life from this mall. Keeping both alive would require a huge increase in business needs, and probably improved road access like the Waterworks was given. Pittsburgh was sized for its 600K population of the mid-1950s, but is now about 375K, although the county is about the same size, so the center is hollowing out.
      The bot battles and drone races could be done in the parking area; I used to use the parking area for the almost abandoned mall near Greensburg (~30 miles away for those not from the area) for model rocketry, as you had a vast unobstructed area.

    • @412foto
      @412foto 6 лет назад +1

      Funny thing is that for several years, I was a part of a high school robotics competition that actually did use the mall for the competition. The thought was to have it in a place where people walking through the mall could stop and interact with the kids and watch the competition. Even then, there was no foot traffic there so that kind of back fired but we had a bunch of empty store fronts we used for the competition pits, set up the competition arenas in the empty area near the escalators, etc. Ended up moving the competition to local community colleges and Cal U of PA. Mall wasn't even as vacant then and was still dead now really really dead. I drive through that area often still and even the roads around the mall are becoming almost undriveable with the size of the potholes and lack of upkeep. Can see photos from the robotics competition at: www.flickr.com/photos/botsiqswpa/albums

    • @natehawkins2910
      @natehawkins2910 5 лет назад +1

      “...all that’s missing is spark...” And money.

  • @JJ-wk5wy
    @JJ-wk5wy 4 года назад +3

    It is so sad to see a place like this, especially since there are still a few stores in operation. And seeing the odd person walking around just doing regular shopping, possibly reminiscing in their minds what the mall used to be like. There is a much smaller mall in my former hometown that has gone this way.

  • @TheAcarch2
    @TheAcarch2 Год назад +1

    Fantastic job on the video. The editing, the music and your calm narrating really make it captivating and so informative. You even managed to keep your camera steady knowing that you were being watched. As most of your commenters would say it is very sad to see these malls dying before our very eyes. Stellar documenting sir, must see part two now.

  • @JLitten617
    @JLitten617 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing. I have fond memories of going at Christmas to do our shopping, traveling from Uniontown. It was always a fun trip.