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Union Square Mall — Union City's lost mall (1973–1987)

Union Square Mall in Union City is one of those places that has almost completely vanished from local memory.

I visited it once as a kid, probably sometime in the mid-1980s. Even then, it felt like a mall that had already given up.

From a 1983 newspaper photo—one of the few surviving interior views of Union Square Mall. By the time many locals remember it, the mall already felt unusually quiet.

What I remember most is how empty it felt. The lighting seemed dim. The floors were exposed aggregate concrete. I vaguely recall a barber shop that may have been one of the last businesses still operating. There were long stretches of corridor with little activity and few shoppers. Even at the time, it felt less like a functioning mall and more like a building waiting for something to happen.

The strange thing is that Union Square Mall had only opened in 1973.

Unlike larger regional malls such as Southland, NewPark, or Stoneridge, Union Square was never intended to become a major shopping destination. Developed by Kelly-Moore Paint Company at Decoto Road and Fremont Boulevard, the enclosed center was anchored by a Safeway supermarket and a Kelly-Moore Home Improvement Center.

The Union Square Mall sign near Decoto Road. Despite its enclosed-mall appearance, the center was conceived as a neighborhood shopping center rather than a regional retail destination.

On paper, it looked like a mall. In practice, it struggled to attract the department stores and major retailers that drove traffic to successful shopping centers during the 1970s.

The building itself was unusual. Rather than a traditional linear mall, the interior was arranged in a giant plus-sign (+) configuration with corridors extending from a central court. Unfortunately, very few photographs of the interior seem to survive today.

By the late 1970s, the warning signs were already apparent.

A December 2, 1977 article in the Fremont Argus described growing concerns among merchants as vacancies increased and stores closed. Management's solution included adding decorative flags throughout the mall in an effort to brighten the atmosphere.

Flags.

It's the kind of detail that sounds almost comical today, but it also hints at how difficult the situation had become. The problem wasn't decoration. The problem was that shoppers simply weren't coming.

The decline accelerated during the early 1980s. By 1983, reports described the mall as roughly 50 percent vacant, and local observers were openly referring to it as "dead."

Union Square never recovered.

By late 1987, the mall had been demolished. In its place rose a more conventional neighborhood shopping center—something better suited to the location and retail market. The original Safeway building at 1790 Decoto Road survived the transition and remains one of the few visible reminders of the old complex.

Today, most Union City residents drive past the site without realizing an enclosed mall once stood there.

In the end, Union Square Mall didn't close with much fanfare. There was no dramatic final day, no famous anchor store departure, and no nostalgic farewell campaign. It simply slipped away.

Yet for those who remember it—even vaguely—it remains one of the Bay Area's strangest retail footnotes: a mall that seemed forgotten long before it was gone.

Comments

Anonymous said…
yes i remember the Union Square Mall. The current Safeway is built on the former KellyMoore "Home Center" site which was a home depot style store with paint, garden, lumber. My father used to get lots of hardware items from there in the late 70's early 1980's when I was growing up. I think there is a dollar store currently on the former site of the Safeway Grocery. The stores I recall were: Round Table Pizza, a hobby store, barber shop and Hair Salon. In the back facing the outside was a Video Arcade 'starcade' during the 'PacMan' days! The McDonalds and Bank of America buildings are the only original buildings on the plot land and still stand today.
TenPoundHammer said…
Hmm, I wonder if this was the first mall in the US to be "demalled"? I know a LOT of California malls were gone by the 1990s, but besides this, the only 1980s demalling I know of is Peach Tree Mall in Marysville.
Anonymous said…
I remember this mall I used to skip school sometimes and hang out at the arcade in the back. I remember it used to have a round table pizza, and a kelly moore paint store, and a couple of loose straggler stores on the inside. From the time I was little (Mid 70's) the mall always had problems keeping tenants, I do remember they used to have a decent haunted house for Halloween on the inside of the little mall every year.
davjaxn said…
I grew up in Union City and remember this mall fondly. There was a store that sold music, posters, buttons... that kind of stuff. Sound of Music maybe (the store was to the left as you walked in)? By brother got a necklace with a picture of Gene Simmons from Kiss on it. It was about 1977. I think there was an ice cream store there. I used to get my hair cut at the barber shop (it was to the left as you walked in the main entrance). Also Round Table Pizza and my favorite store that was to the right near the entrance was called The Galactic Starport. I bought a Muppet Movie postere there of Fozzie and Kermit. I remember around 1978 they had two special guests there doing a signing: Anthony Daniels and Dave Prowse. Both actors for a new (at the time) popular movie called Star Wars! I got autographs from both Daniels (C-3P0) and Prowse (Darth Vader) and still have them. Great memories. Wish there were some pictures out there somewhere.
Anonymous said…
There was also the original Rose Garden (Chinese Resturant) that is now located further up Alvarado. I remember the original owner, a lilttle old man. We used to call him gramps.
Spliff Sparker said…
Yes indeed, a “dark mall” to be sure.
Our mall of choice was the one across H Street from James Logan High School.
It had a Radio Shack (free monthly batteries for my tape player), a record store, barbershop, laundry mat, bank, liquor store and a pool hall hidden down a corridor in the back.

Truant heaven to be sure.....
Anonymous said…
One major memory about this strange little mall: Galactic Star Port. We called it “the Star Wars Store” It was a combination model kits, posters, movie memorabilia & space toys capitalizing on the late-70’s Star Wars and Star Trek “Wrath of Khan” craze. I remember there were some uniquely detailed space helmets (with requisite blast shields) and monster masks( ala Creature Cantina) behind the cashier. Everything in the store was EX-pensive. Even at my young age I remember thinking that the store would’ve done better at a different location. We entered through the interior of the mall and I do not recall an exterior display window.

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