Niketown takes flight quietly
Andrew Edwards
A collection of shirts bearing the words “Niketown Orange County”
were on display Sunday in a corner of the Costa Mesa store. Today,
the shirts look likely to become anachronisms.
Sunday was Niketown’s last day in Costa Mesa after the athletic
retailer had announced plans to shut down earlier in the month.
Company representatives said a scarcity of businesses at Triangle
Square motivated the move.
Triangle Square’s upper-level food court is virtually abandoned,
but Niketown’s departure leaves the most noticeable vacancy at the
mall. Niketown’s lofty dome greeted many visitors to Costa Mesa who
arrived to the city via the freeway.
“We’ll miss Niketown,” City Councilman Gary Monahan said. “It’s
been kind of a monument as you come off the [Costa Mesa Freeway].”
As of Friday, there was no word on what business will next occupy
Triangle Square’s most visible vertex. Triangle Square spokeswoman
Vanessa Showalter said the mall’s management was in negotiations to
find a new tenant but had not yet inked a deal.
The shopping center has struggled since its 1992 opening to retain
stores. In addition to its vacancies on the upper level, two
supermarkets built in Triangle Square’s basement have left. Planning
Commissioner Bill Perkins said he wants a turnaround at Triangle
Square, though he acknowledged the mall’s troubled track record.
“I just hope that management and the leasing department have big
plans for that location and the rest of the center, but I have my
doubts,” he said.
Nightspots like the Yard House and Sutra Lounge have been able to
lure crowds to Triangle Square, and mall managers want to recast the
mall’s image as a place for dining and entertainment, Showalter said.
Inside Niketown on Sunday, the gear that made Nike famous,
athletic shoes, sportswear and Michael Jordan-related clothing were
still on sale. Some of the items were marked down, but price cuts
were not drastic.
“They’re way overpriced; I can go to Chick’s Sporting Goods and
get it for $20 less,” customer John Steves of Laguna Niguel said
after he left the store empty-handed.
Price reductions included a green men’s tennis shirt marked down
from $50 to $30, and a red women’s vest on sale for $49.99, down from
$75.
“[The discounts] were OK,” shopper Nakisa Aschtiani, 24, of
Mission Viejo said. “I guess it depends on what you’re looking for.”
An effort to interview Niketown employees was referred to the
store’s manager, who said no one at the store was cleared to comment.
Nike Inc. has not announced any plans to open a new Niketown in
Orange County, leaving the company’s Wilshire Boulevard store the
nearest location for locals who frequented Niketown.
Rhonda Gioia, whose husband Tom said the couple were very loyal
Niketown customers, showed up on Sunday to stock up on gear before
the store’s closing.
“We’re wondering where we’re going to go,” Rhonda Gioia said.
“We’ll probably drive to Beverly Hills.”
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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