B.W. COOK -- The Crowd
The operative word is most definitely style. South Coast Plaza
celebrated the opening of The Bridge of Gardens, its massive contemporary
art form with function that spans Bear Street with a pedestrian walkway
joining the retail center on both sides of the street.
A Thursday midday ceremony featured everything from an orchestra
perched atop an elevator shaft to the release of hundreds of white doves
to the blasting of confetti suitable for your basic 5th Avenue ticker
tape parade. Style, style, and more style.
Moreover, the mood was electric. Not your average shopping center
ribbon cutting.
“The bridge is a local monument to art, architecture and usability,”
offered Betty Shafer, a Costa Mesa shopper standing on the sidelines of
all the hoopla. “I’ve walked it, and it is a wonderful experience. You
feel like you are walking on air.”
Following brief tributes by dignitaries -- including Costa Mesa Mayor
Gary Monahan, South Coast Plaza managing partner Henry Segerstrom and
members of the bridge design team, including lead architect Kathryn
Gustafson -- invited guests and the public at large was invited to cross
the span to the new South Coast Plaza stores on the west side of Bear
Street.
In the crowd were high-ranking executives from Macy’s, representing
the new home store that recently opened in the new building.
“Just cross the bridge and turn right,” said the ranking Macy’s boss,
teasing the crowd to come and experience the massive home center.
“It is fabulous. Absolutely incredible,” said Irvine resident Cathy De
Meco, who had already been shopping at the Macy’s store. “The selection
and the merchandising is remarkable. They have everything.”
So, as a good columnist following directions, I crossed the bridge and
turned right. There we were in the most impressive home store one can
imagine. De Meco was not exaggerating.
Macy’s has created four floors of home shopping unparalleled in
Southern California. There were even lava lamps for those seeking a
little retro.
Wolfgang Puck, as in the real Wolf himself, was doing a cooking
demonstration in the kitchen department. The furniture, displayed on
several levels, reminds me of the glory days of department stores when
big businesses like Bloomingdale’s in New York set the pace with the
latest and the best of market-grade furniture with flair.
Shoppers can just pick the grouping of their choice and have an
instant room with decorator sensibilities. They even have designer picnic
tables. And china with a cow pattern, which to me was just not kosher.
After all, how could one eat a hamburger on a plate designed with cow
spots?
Turning left from the cow-imprinted china and ending up in the middle
of the Godiva chocolate section of the store, waiters appeared with trays
of beverages to welcome guests to the opening luncheon in honor of the
bridge and the union of Macy’s and South Coast Plaza.
Hosted by Macy’s, cream-colored drapes were drawn by waiters in black
tie with red carnations in their lapels, while servers in blue chambray
shirts and starched white aprons were very busy transforming what is most
probably a delivery space into a salon worthy of photographic duplication
in high end magazine publications covering the world of dining and
catering.
Wolfgang Puck, who really was demonstrating his recipes at the other
end of the store, had the Wolfgang Puck Cafe restaurant at South Coast
Plaza handle the luncheon duties. While guests enjoyed the Puck fair of
salad a la crab sushi, beef sirloin and halibut, followed by creme
brulee, South Coast Plaza was orchestrating a massive dining event on the
upper floors of the new center, calling the luncheon “a taste of South
Coast Plaza.”
It was far more than a taste as the multitude of dining experiences at
the Center set up booths to serve their finery.
OK, it’s all about business. South Coast Plaza and Macy’s and even
Wolfgang Puck are there to make the green stuff. They are the first to
admit it. Nevertheless, this was a wonderful afternoon of pomp,
circumstance, food, furniture and a magical new bridge to unite it all.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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