Exploring the Abandoned Richland Mall - 80s in Decay

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The Proper People

The Proper People

Күн бұрын

Thanks to MyHeritage for sponsoring a portion of this video.
Buy a DNA kit here: bit.ly/TheProperPeople Use the coupon code PROPERPEOPLE for free shipping.
You can start a 30-day free trial of MyHeritage's subscription for family history research.
In this episode we're exploring the Richland Fashion Mall. Opened in 1988, the Richland Mall was struggling from the beginning with vacant anchors and only half of the retail space leased. The mall remained open while mostly empty until 2022 and demolition began in 2024.
Check out bonus photos and videos of when the mall was operational: • Richland Fashion Mall ...
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0:00 Intro
2:41 Sponsored Message
4:22 Parisian Anchor
9:38 Parisian Concourse
10:45 Food Court
13:12 Mall Concourse
21:07 Cinema
24:09 Main Atrium
28:45 Office Space Conversion
35:44 Dillards Concourse
37:57 Dillards Anchor
43:16 Mall Concourse
51:12 Outro

Пікірлер: 1 300
@TheProperPeople
@TheProperPeople 28 күн бұрын
Thanks to MyHeritage for sponsoring a portion of this video. Buy a DNA kit here: bit.ly/TheProperPeople and use the coupon code PROPERPEOPLE for free shipping and a 30 day free trial for their family research subscription. Check out more old photos and videos of this mall from when it was operational! kzfaq.info/get/bejne/Z7SlY7yc0LGunJ8.html
@Otinikツ
@Otinikツ 28 күн бұрын
I don’t need this
@xxdesertstorm
@xxdesertstorm 28 күн бұрын
they'll more than likely be hacked and data will be leaked as 23andme still hasn't recovered since they got hacked
@heyitsC1
@heyitsC1 28 күн бұрын
@@Otinikツ why comment bruh
@Otinikツ
@Otinikツ 28 күн бұрын
@@heyitsC1 because I can?
@jaysmith179
@jaysmith179 28 күн бұрын
Sad what this current guy in charge in the USA is doing to Jews. I hope people wake up and vote red to protect the future is Jews.
@CowTown
@CowTown Ай бұрын
That intro was awesome!! 😄
@flamegaming760
@flamegaming760 28 күн бұрын
FOR SURE!
@SoutheastWarrenEAS
@SoutheastWarrenEAS 28 күн бұрын
This is why I LOVE THIS CHANNEL 🙏💯
@p51mustang52
@p51mustang52 28 күн бұрын
it is epic!
@tekvax01
@tekvax01 27 күн бұрын
I had a bunch of those panasonic green and black SVHS cassette tapes back in the day!
@tres909
@tres909 27 күн бұрын
Best freaking intro off any video that I've seen in a good ol minute!!
@emilyhubbard1510
@emilyhubbard1510 26 күн бұрын
Yall have no idea how much this means to me! This is in my hometown and since my husband and I are in the military I have not been home in awhile. I remember going to this mall with my grandmother who is no longer alive. My father and I spent many hours at the Barnes and noble. I saw many movies there in college. It was emotional to see this. Thank you so much 🫡🥹
@itswhatever816
@itswhatever816 21 күн бұрын
And now it's mostly gone.. they started demolition in May 😢 I'm going to try to sneak over there and grab a chunk of something as a keepsake.
@LylaShlon
@LylaShlon 21 күн бұрын
Same!!!! I just went to the b&n last Christmas to get gifts for my cousins kids. This is so so surreal!!! I screamed at the animatronic bear orchestra being uncovered 😭😭 they STILL MAKE ME JUST AS FREAKED OUT AS THEY DID WHEN I WAS A KID!!!
@sandrajustus1247
@sandrajustus1247 7 күн бұрын
My husband, a welder, welded up the big marquee at the entrance. The company, Lexco Sales and Engineering has been gone since 2005. My husband retired at that time. He talked much about the round design and all the struts needed. He's been gone for 8 years now. He would have loved to see this.
@iamgermane
@iamgermane Күн бұрын
Imagine the money spent to build this place! I know of a similar mall, and it is for sale for $5 million!?!?
@SuperMewio
@SuperMewio 28 күн бұрын
It's so weird seeing things like "wifi" and "like us on facebook" in a building that is starting to rot and fall apart due to being abandoned.
@MSGsTreasures
@MSGsTreasures 27 күн бұрын
Just last year the barnes and noble was still open. I live like 4 minutes from this and my wife went here all the time as a kid. They are in the process of starting to tear it all down and develop something new here, but i forgot the details.
@jerrysanders9101
@jerrysanders9101 27 күн бұрын
Hopefully Facebook is right behind them lol
@jerrysanders9101
@jerrysanders9101 27 күн бұрын
@@MSGsTreasureswow. Interesting.
@Scoobis925
@Scoobis925 27 күн бұрын
@@MSGsTreasuresthe details were given at the end. Restaurants, apartments, supermarkets, and green space
@MSGsTreasures
@MSGsTreasures 27 күн бұрын
@Scoobis925 yeah I watched the whole thing, jumped the gun a little lol
@NicksMadScience
@NicksMadScience 28 күн бұрын
The fact that they went out of their way to cover up all those high ceilings and natural light in the converted office space makes it extra depressing
@DBVintage
@DBVintage 27 күн бұрын
I went to a Baskin Robbins that I had gone to in my childhood back in the 1970s. The place originally had a very open ceiling, but they put a drop ceiling in it and it just made it depressing.
@QuintusAntonious
@QuintusAntonious 27 күн бұрын
This keeps happening in dying malls too, even when they aren't converted to offices. I wonder if it's an attempt to reduce energy costs from heating and cooling? Either way, it detracts from the appeal of the space.
@bentucker2301
@bentucker2301 26 күн бұрын
Cheaper to AC or heat. Profit over employees wellbeing always
@DVeck89
@DVeck89 26 күн бұрын
@@bentucker2301 That's exactly why they did that
@billyswithkerser
@billyswithkerser 27 күн бұрын
Mate that intro was probably an absolute pain in the ass but the result is spectacular. Bryan and Michael lots of appreciation for your dedication to content,from Australia
@timfreeman8656
@timfreeman8656 24 күн бұрын
It's cool that y'all, all the way across the pond, got to see something from my hometown. Love to Australia
@scottsaunders4862
@scottsaunders4862 8 күн бұрын
As a Columbia resident, you use to be able to walk through the entire thing until 2019. Barnes and Noble left in December in 2023 and the whole place is now being demolished. When my wife and I were bored we’d walk through it for the vibes on Friday nights
@TheNewgreatlife
@TheNewgreatlife 24 күн бұрын
I could literally cry. It's like all of my hopes for seeing everything about this mall have finally been answered! It's been over a decade since I first discovered this place and I've been extremely intrigued about it ever since. I never thought I'd get to see anything of the original food court (either vintage photos or what it looks like today), but you guys made the impossible come to fruition. Thank you so much! I thought no one would be able to top Sal's video back in 2020, but this is the true ultimate Richland Fashion Mall adventure. You guys covered every nook and cranny of this place. I can't thank you enough! This feels like a proper complete farewell to this extremely interesting, yet cursed piece of Columbia, SC retail history.
@ashleybrooke2087
@ashleybrooke2087 27 күн бұрын
I have to be in the right mood to watch these because the emptiness of such once lively & occupied places reminds me of being at a funeral. It's this sadness at what has been lost to time.
@ttintagel
@ttintagel 26 күн бұрын
Especially for an 80s kids like me; so many of my happy memories are at the mall!
@ashleybrooke2087
@ashleybrooke2087 26 күн бұрын
@@ttintagel I'm more of a 90s kids but we still hung out at malls. I know it's just progress & how things change with time but there's just something about all that empty space & all the energy that went into creating it that isn't there anymore.
@chatnoir7923
@chatnoir7923 26 күн бұрын
I get the same feeling watching where they explore old abandoned once-beautiful homes.
@jvtify
@jvtify 25 күн бұрын
People had lives here, I just imagine the employees coming in hating their lives. The people walking by the stores wanting something they'll never buy. Celebrating a special occasion at the buffet all these memories that energy of 1000's of people's life's now still in quiet
@BeamsbyDiDi
@BeamsbyDiDi 13 күн бұрын
Well said. It breaks my heart to see this once beautiful and vibrant space look so ghastly and horrific.
@knightgabriel4018
@knightgabriel4018 28 күн бұрын
VHS, light buzz sound, moist carpet.. welcome to the backroom
@My_Random_Brain
@My_Random_Brain 28 күн бұрын
Yeah… I really like abandoned malls that just give off that vibe. It seems calming almost
@vapormissile
@vapormissile 27 күн бұрын
​@@My_Random_Brainamen. Sort of a helpless calm, like when you sprint all the way out to the road, & look both ways but realize they're gone, you're alone. they *actually left without you* Like "welp, might as well look around while I wait to die" type of calm.
@christiangonzales7429
@christiangonzales7429 27 күн бұрын
Why do backrooms always have that buzzing sound?
@jwalster9412
@jwalster9412 27 күн бұрын
"huh weird I don't remember my basement having this hallway"
@liamtheinventor1522
@liamtheinventor1522 27 күн бұрын
@@christiangonzales7429the ballast is what runs fluorescent lamps and commonly buzzes during operation
@RewindRetroTV
@RewindRetroTV 28 күн бұрын
The animatronic bears were a whole little orchestra they would put out at Christmas and they would play like every 30 min, and each cycle was a good length of time.
@EphemeralProductions
@EphemeralProductions 27 күн бұрын
❤️
@ttintagel
@ttintagel 26 күн бұрын
And now they look like 12 Nights of Christmas at Freddy's
@LylaShlon
@LylaShlon 21 күн бұрын
I screamed when they uncovered those!!! WHAT MEMORIES!
@o0GreyKnight0o
@o0GreyKnight0o 17 күн бұрын
I found them in a news article, looks like @TheProperPeople discovered The Leonard Bernstein Symphony Orchestra.
@RewindRetroTV
@RewindRetroTV 15 күн бұрын
@@o0GreyKnight0o i knew it was a bear pun, but for the life of me I couldn’t remember which famous musician it was. Thank you!!!
@alexstronczek
@alexstronczek 28 күн бұрын
I’ve lived in Columbia since 2016 and remember walking through this mall before they closed most of it off to the public and before it got so vandalized. I’m glad y’all came and documented it before they demolished it. Loved seeing the areas I’ve hadn’t seen before!
@growingup15
@growingup15 28 күн бұрын
For those who don't know. Richland Fashion Mall is now mostly torn down. I live in the area and drive by it everyday. It's being torn down and being replaced with a mixed used complex of Shopping and Apartments.
@trashman11
@trashman11 28 күн бұрын
Do I know you?
@moronnucleosus3339
@moronnucleosus3339 28 күн бұрын
I drove by it the other day. It's looking sad. I was 2 when this mall opened.
@quakes1841
@quakes1841 28 күн бұрын
It's probably what the did down here in Florida.. tore down a mall and built one of them drive malls, got a parking lot but there's no big mall like this. You'd have to walk across the street to see the other building or if you can get a parking spot in front of the place you want to see.
@jayevans1341
@jayevans1341 27 күн бұрын
Basically they are tearing down the mall to put in another structure for stores that will be similar to the original open mall feeling back when s&s cafeteria was there. Crazy how it comes full circle.
@paulvamos7319
@paulvamos7319 27 күн бұрын
😂 So American it's funny! Mall life or van life? Both please! 😊
@dimplesd8931
@dimplesd8931 15 күн бұрын
My mom and I loved Richland Fashion Mall! We were at the opening. The old open concourse mall was Richland Mall and it had JB White, Tapps and S&S cafeteria along with other local stores. RF mall had Bon Whit Teller(they lasted 3yrs then were replaced by Dillards, JB White and Persian as anchors. We felt so fancy shopping there. I hope they can restart demolition soon. They had a bad fire a week ago. Thanks for the video and memories
@TheWaxworker
@TheWaxworker 28 күн бұрын
It reminds me of a word I first learned from another urban explorer, Jon Revelle -- obsolescence. We build these huge structures with the idea that they will last forever or at least for an age, but they fall into disuse and quickly become irrelevant. It's a clear lesson about the passage of time and the utter temporariness of everything.
@56243G
@56243G 28 күн бұрын
Who knew the younger generations would be afraid to leave the apartment or house?
@steadholderharrington9035
@steadholderharrington9035 28 күн бұрын
Its funny, cause we still have dozens of big malls here where I live, dating back to the 70's, and they just keep on renovating them for the times. We're probably still the mall capital per capita of people, in the world, even 20 years later.😅
@boscosworld
@boscosworld 28 күн бұрын
?
@jaysmith179
@jaysmith179 28 күн бұрын
I miss Dan Bell . You all are keeping this history going. Thank you.
@TheCoolDave
@TheCoolDave 28 күн бұрын
Remember, everything is temporary if you give it enough time......
@darbymcmanus1020
@darbymcmanus1020 26 күн бұрын
I used to walk with my grandparents around the mall and we would get to go to the bottom floor to dollar tree and get the grab bags. Good memories at that place. Makes me miss my grandfather a lot.
@xliquidflames
@xliquidflames 28 күн бұрын
25:57 A chair just chillin' _and_ Christmas decorations in one spot.
@gmsloep
@gmsloep 28 күн бұрын
Hard to believe the theater was still in operation just a few months before this video. I actually live not far from this mall, and it's sad to see how bad of a shape it's in.
@combatwombat2134
@combatwombat2134 28 күн бұрын
How long is a few months? It seems so decrepit for that length of time, that's really shocking it got to that state so quickly but I suppose if you leave somewhere with moisture, air and time it doesn't take long for mould to grow like that.
@jayevans1341
@jayevans1341 27 күн бұрын
Yeah I haven’t been in the mall for a few years but it is shocking to see it now or at least when this was filmed. LensCrafters was in there just a few years ago
@gmsloep
@gmsloep 27 күн бұрын
@combatwombat2134 not even 6 months ago, there was an operational Barnes and Noble, the only one for over half an hour's drive on a good day. Now they've moved about 5 miles down the road to a completely different shopping center.
@combatwombat2134
@combatwombat2134 27 күн бұрын
@@gmsloep Jesus... That's alarming. It really doesn't take long at all; that leaking water has really, really screwed the place up.
@michaelmoore931
@michaelmoore931 24 күн бұрын
The theater went downhill quick after it closed!
@csudsuindustries
@csudsuindustries 28 күн бұрын
The locked room in the VZ call center with the Hazardous markings would have been a large UPS location to supply backup power to the call floor. Having a call center go down on customers creates more issues for customer perception so it is cheaper to power the call floor itself.
@kaelananderson9237
@kaelananderson9237 23 күн бұрын
The numbers on the hazard diamond match one for sulfuric acid, per an MSDS for sealed lead acid batteries - the type used in a typical UPS system - so I'd say that tracks.
@slgleaton375
@slgleaton375 12 күн бұрын
I worked at VZ at the center in Elgin. We did have an electrical room that had to be checked several times daily. There were call centers all over the country, so it wasn't that big of a deal to close due to no power.
@happybalrog
@happybalrog 28 күн бұрын
What a trip. Used to go here in high school for movies, Barnes and Nobles, and Christmas tree lighting each year. That was about 12 years ago now
@ozymandias7940
@ozymandias7940 27 күн бұрын
It's interesting to see the rate at which a complex deteriorates once abandoned. It gives you an idea of how expensive and time consuming it would be to maintain such a huge complex for decades while it is open. Locating leaks, roof repairs, painting, etc. I imagine that's why the a/c systems are left on 24/7 to reduce the amount of moisture within the complex and prevent mold and mildew building up. Great video!
@P_RO_
@P_RO_ 27 күн бұрын
The building maintenance costs of malls makes store leases too expensive. With SC's hot summers air conditioning alone would kill you with all the glass letting the warming sun in.
@Knights_Oath
@Knights_Oath 25 күн бұрын
This mall was falling apart before the closed, most malls are. Leaky roofs were the biggest killers of malls before they stared dying off.
@ChestersButterfly
@ChestersButterfly 28 күн бұрын
I have been watching y'alls videos religiously for years, and am always in awe with the level of detail and albeit charm put into these videos. But the icing on the cake for me will always be the music. I dont know where y'all find it or its original, but it never fails to always meet the atmosphere of every location. Kudos on another fantastic piece of abandonment.
@1989Longboy
@1989Longboy 26 күн бұрын
My wife works across the road from the now almost completely demoed mall. She said that when the work started, people asked if they could park in her work establishment's parking lot, just to observe the mall being tore down. That makes me think that they had alot of memories there...or they just found destruction of the building interesting. Back when Barns And Noble was in operation there, we walked in and looked around, eventually making our way to the back of the store with this glass wall, and metal door type thing. I recall the smell at that door not being very pleasant. I also remember there being 2 or 3 cars being on the other side (mall side of course) of the glass wall. They looked like dirt track cars to me. I wonder what happened to them? 🤔...probably junked. Any any rate, I never went into this mall (as far as i can remember)...other than the time i went into the book store with my wife. I always ended up Columbiana Mall, off Harbison. Richland Mall seemed a bit more classier to me. More sophisticated, due to ceiling designs, lighting arrangements, and all the glass for skylights, and certain entrance points from the roof top parking. I bet that food court with the glass walls and ceiling was LEGIT back in the malls prime. Certainly something to experience. But...I tell you one thing. That call center was DEPRESSING. It's a textbook example of what a call center would look like. Cubicles everywhere. Not a window in sight. Stereotypical office lighting. RIP to the mall. But not that call center 😅.
@MrJam1858
@MrJam1858 26 күн бұрын
I used to frequent that mall at least once a month in the 90s and 00s. The Barnes and Noble, a sports memorabilia store that had Yu-Gi-Oh tournaments in the back. So many memories. It's sad to see it now.
@jonhaugen5799
@jonhaugen5799 28 күн бұрын
Always find the Mall Management, Maintenance/Janitorial and Security offices. Sometimes you can find some interesting things there in regards to the Malls history.
@jaydennn916
@jaydennn916 27 күн бұрын
was looking up those “___ but it’s in an abandoned mall” videos and found this.. this was the mall my grandma took me to play at as a kid about fifteen years ago & this place was still nice but definitely a ghost town then. i now live across the country and it’s absolutely crazy to see one of my favorite childhood memories in such a decrepit state
@yeetusfeetus7809
@yeetusfeetus7809 28 күн бұрын
I USED TO GO TO THIS MALL! I CANT BELIEVE YOU CAME TO MY HOMETOWN!
@DoorKicker
@DoorKicker 27 күн бұрын
Used to do mold removals. When you guys walked into this area, my chest tightened a bit. I would recommend a respirator, bros. 42:00
@xliquidflames
@xliquidflames 28 күн бұрын
The curtain in front of the movie screen used to be the norm. All movie theaters used to do it. It would split down the middle and pull back to both sides or it would raise up into the ceiling. I don't know why or when they stopped doing it but I remember it well from being a kid in the 80s. I also remember there being just curtains on the edges and they would be in one spot for the previews then when the movie started they would pull back further. And then the curtains just went away completely.
@Wegetsignal
@Wegetsignal 26 күн бұрын
More equipment to maintain lol. Honest answer. Cost cuts, probably. Many theaters run very low margins, and they're already relying on that $10 popcorn.
@Rayven_cat
@Rayven_cat 25 күн бұрын
I had completely forgotten about the big curtain reveal.
@btk22279
@btk22279 Ай бұрын
That original food court looked nice
@alantherock225
@alantherock225 27 күн бұрын
It was a huge downgrade going from that one to the new one. Most people hated the changes and kind of knew that it was the beginning of the end for the mall
@Trainy2
@Trainy2 27 күн бұрын
@@alantherock225 If you want to breathe new life into a mall, downgrading things seems like a dumb way to go.
@andrewwhite5194
@andrewwhite5194 25 күн бұрын
It was. I grew up with this mall in the early 90s. I think the last time I went to the theater there was 2015 or 16. and I went to Belk several times before they closed. The original food court, for me as a kid, was fantastic. There was a really great sit-down German restaurant. All of the mobile sculptures hanging from the ceiling going at once in the skylight area were so cool.
@alantherock225
@alantherock225 25 күн бұрын
@@andrewwhite5194 There was an arcade at the original food court as well. That's what I missed the most as a kid.
@bennyfactor
@bennyfactor 27 күн бұрын
Much more than the primary colors and neon of stranger things, this sort of bluish green and bright brass with the soft pink accents is what I think of when I remember 80s design. Cool that you got to document it!
@kaelananderson9237
@kaelananderson9237 23 күн бұрын
Agreed! Teal + light pink + brass is quintessential 80s in my mind, it was everywhere when I was growing up in the 90s.
@viktorakhmedov3442
@viktorakhmedov3442 20 күн бұрын
Yeah it really peaked from 1987-1993.
@lonniesmith8868
@lonniesmith8868 25 күн бұрын
I have lived in columbia sc since 1985. I have worked, shopped, and hung out in this mall. I remember the old food court. It was depressing to see that we lost that beautiful, big, bright food court for such a horrific office space. Thanks so much for covering this! My husband and i were saying how much we hoped yall would!
@EngineeringMindset
@EngineeringMindset 27 күн бұрын
42:42 This is very high risk for legionnaires disease. Be careful in these situations, that's a very old and clearly unmaintained chiller system.
@vidmasterK1
@vidmasterK1 27 күн бұрын
They're not careful. You can hear how heavy they were breathing in the moldy JackSons buffet without masks or respiratory equipment 😂😢
@ryatt1
@ryatt1 27 күн бұрын
They never wear respirators anymore man, it sucks
@mason74551
@mason74551 27 күн бұрын
I've seen a few of these videos and I'm wondering why they don't take precautions for these sorts of things. Got to adventure safely.
@viktorakhmedov3442
@viktorakhmedov3442 26 күн бұрын
@@ryatt1 YOLO
@chrislongbeard
@chrislongbeard 25 күн бұрын
After surviving my last apartment, I am convinced I am immune to almost anything.
@drno-xc1yt
@drno-xc1yt 28 күн бұрын
Wow, that cubicle hell with the cliche motivational quotes all over the walls - what a depressing place to show up to every day. "Cubicle 2333, why aren't you at your post?!!"
@OddLeah
@OddLeah 28 күн бұрын
Why are you commenting on KZfaq videos? Where are your TPS reports?!!
@christiangonzales7429
@christiangonzales7429 27 күн бұрын
You would have thought that office with the cubicles was run by Lumburgh.
@McNetDeck
@McNetDeck 27 күн бұрын
There's no way it was one single call center with that many cubicles.
@redsquirrelftw
@redsquirrelftw 27 күн бұрын
I can practically picture that office being active, the low talking sounds, phones ringing, and the overall feeling of tension and depression. Is it 5:00 yet? Oh, it's only 2:54, oh well it's break soon at least.
@flakky55
@flakky55 26 күн бұрын
looks like something Budget Cuts VR would have gotten inspiration from or something....
@lukescapee1234
@lukescapee1234 28 күн бұрын
I thought this looked familiar! My wife and I lived in Columbia, SC for 6 months in 2019. We visited here when there was just a few stores open still. Crazy how much more rundown it looks now. Excited to watch this whole video!
@Balthiem
@Balthiem 28 күн бұрын
The nice light buzzing of lights, the blank white walls in areas, you're like 2 steps from a liminal space. Also, I'm gonna count that messed up Gingerbread man as a a tally for Christmas decorations yall normally look for haha.
@Unit38
@Unit38 26 күн бұрын
As a young chap in the 60's, the closest thing to a "mall" then was the Sears & Roebuck Dept. store. They sold everything from eye glasses to Ted William's shotguns and rifles. You could even pay your light and phone bill while you were there. My dad was a minister and thusly we moved around a good bit. In the early 70's, he pastored a church in Livonia MI. They had an actual Mall there. Their "anchor" stores were, of course, a large Sears and a smaller J.C Penney. What fascinated my, 11 or 12 year old self, were all of the smaller stores that was in between them, under one roof.
@nikkiharney3578
@nikkiharney3578 26 күн бұрын
My first memory is of my parents holding my hands and walking me through a Sears to go have my Christmas picture taken. This would have been in 1995 or 1996. I also remember going with my Dad to get his tires fixed at the Sears auto center. Sad to think about how it isn’t around anymore.
@sciencedude22
@sciencedude22 27 күн бұрын
I live near here! This is my mall! I was last here in 2022, and it's facinating to see how fast things decay in just 2 years. They stopped actively maintaining the place a few years before covid, like they cleaned things and kept the elevator working but when lights went out they'd wait to put a new one in for months. Covid was just the nail in the coffin. The china max you saw, I don't remember ever being open, so it must've closed down before 2011 when I first visited. You should have tried using the elevator, the bell makes the most forlorn ding. I never knew the display cases near the front used to be stores, so much space back there. That hazard diamond you saw, if it is to be believed, means "extreme danger: health hazard", and based on the rest of the building, probably black mold. Be glad you couldn't open the door. Those verizon offices are straight up just the backrooms. That mold in dillards looks like its dissolving the mall. Pretty sad, and also understandable why they've decided to just demolish the whole thing. Thank you for this video.
@Jelly-kb6hl
@Jelly-kb6hl 14 күн бұрын
I’ve always been such a big fan of this mall’s beautiful and obscure architecture, even in its decrepit state I still used to visit. Seeing this video makes me so happy, I never expected to see full coverage of the place! I was personally never able to experience the first food court, but my parents had, and always told me about how nice it was. Thank you for documenting this, it feels like the perfect closure to the mall’s present demolition.
@fitz6983
@fitz6983 5 күн бұрын
So glad you did a video on this place, grew up going to this mall as a child living only 5 minutes away, and even spent days hanging out in the interior after it was mostly abandoned. As a student at the high school across the street from this place, it’s a huge part of where I spent my time with friends, so cool someone could capture and immortalize the interior of this place.
@Mistypedname
@Mistypedname 26 күн бұрын
Wow, you guys! That intro was magic. I had so many memories come up when watching that, even though I've never stood foot into that building before. The classic shades of pink, teal and gold combo! I can only imagine how regal everything would have looked with the lighting. Its bittersweet to think about how the 80's-00's used to be so community based. Holidays, celebrations, fashion shows, time capsules, you name it; I even remember entering every colouring contests I could get my hands on when I was a kid... and for it to slowly fall apart and have it filled with cubicles, florescent lighting, covered windows and skylights creating a depressing grey abyss. Its heartbreaking... and makes you think...
@gabrielle-alexis
@gabrielle-alexis 23 күн бұрын
As someone who suffered from mold toxicity this video was extremely triggering! Mold will wreak havoc on your health even if only exposed for a short amount of time. You guys should wear protective gear, it can take years to recover from mold toxicity.
@michaelmoore931
@michaelmoore931 24 күн бұрын
As someone who shopped in that mall from the time it opened to the time it closed, Barnes and Noble shopping was odd with the dead mall all around it. But it was what it was. Thanks for filming this!
@CTFilms803
@CTFilms803 20 күн бұрын
I live right around the corner and have seen every inch of this abandoned mall. I’m so happy to finally see coverage of this place since it’s been so unknown. There was a fire there a few days ago during demolition, and it’s so sad to see it go but I’m hopeful that what’s to come is actually good
@therandomdot2563
@therandomdot2563 6 күн бұрын
Watching these is like watching someone walk through a lost fragment of memory in your mind from your youth or childhood. A memory that's decaying, going to be gone soon, maybe to free up space for a new memory or just gone as you get older and your mind is decaying. A memory that started out long ago where you were there in a moment, lots of people around, hustle-n-bustle, maybe you were excited to be there to buy something. But, now, you can't quite remember. You just remember the shape of the place. You don't remember the people, or why you were there. You just know that you were there at some point. Can barely make out the detail. The memory is falling apart, and it's better to let it die than to dwell on how hollow it feels now.
@Lil1kv
@Lil1kv 14 күн бұрын
Damn, it really became just the backrooms after barnes and noble left, nothing else left to redeem it. I remember going there every once in a while to spend time with family and then going to the Moe's across the street. Edit : seeing the theater made me cry. I remember seeing some animated movie as a kid when i was there. That ugly ramp, the neon lights. Its actually surreal.
@jakespeaks6095
@jakespeaks6095 28 күн бұрын
That was a sick transition from the intro to title theme
@vidmasterK1
@vidmasterK1 27 күн бұрын
@@jakespeaks6095 transitions won't be the only sick thing, so will they
@AJ-vi4nl
@AJ-vi4nl 26 күн бұрын
@@vidmasterK1 Why?
@vidmasterK1
@vidmasterK1 26 күн бұрын
@@AJ-vi4nl they don't wear masks or respirators when walking through all those moldy mildew areas
@tendraftsdeep
@tendraftsdeep 28 күн бұрын
I went here as a teenager back in the day! Moved, decades later came back around 2013 and it was sad spooky. Much love Columbia.
@kyle6807
@kyle6807 28 күн бұрын
This is the video I've waited for from you guys. I have so many memories of this mall. I grew up going, and have made several nostalgia-driven visits in the last few years before it finally closed for good. It's sad to see it in a state of disrepair and now being demolished, but I'm glad that it has been documented for everyone to see. Thank you for the video.
@CRman734
@CRman734 28 күн бұрын
Awesome to see a local exploration here in Columbia! Would love to see more SC explorations.
@auburnalum9019
@auburnalum9019 28 күн бұрын
Surprised it closed because there ain't $_!t do do in Columbia.
@nimblehealer199
@nimblehealer199 28 күн бұрын
They dug up the time capsule and relocated it to a more, suitable location. IIRC, they are going to build a new community.
@Grimlock-ry8fg
@Grimlock-ry8fg 27 күн бұрын
I thought the time capsule was a bit optimistic, given the circumstances, but at lest it was moved.
@coleyrolley3710
@coleyrolley3710 6 күн бұрын
It is so incredibly surreal to see the mall across the street from your high school that housed your best study spaces explored on the internet with over 200,000 viewers. They started tearing it down about a year ago and have taken about half of it by now it is so odd.
@Mawn_x
@Mawn_x 2 күн бұрын
My cousin & I went there back in 2019 to watch a movie at the theater. It was sooooo eerily quiet as we made our way up to the theater. I was like “why tf are we here?!” 😂 We ended up getting locked out (bc she thought it was a great idea to park at the front of the mall). So one of the workers at the theatre had to drive us back down to get to the car. It was even creepier by nightfall. It’s an experience that I’ll never forget!
@sarahcoleman5269
@sarahcoleman5269 27 күн бұрын
I can almost guarantee that the developer was in the business since 1982 and was like "I know what a fancy mall should look like!" Commence with neon lighting and pastel tile art. Also, that theater seating wasn't just the "old style" it was vintage. It wasn't too long after that when theaters started introducing a greater angle that you had to use stairs to go up. Also entering in at the bottom and going up, rather than entering at the top and having a slight slope down.
@stellacat123
@stellacat123 29 күн бұрын
Very cool intro! One of my favorite things that you guys do is tell the history of the places you explore, and that took it up a notch! I also had to look into that time capsule and luckily it sounds like it will be reburied in the park that will be built in that area.
@JounLord1
@JounLord1 28 күн бұрын
This really hits me in the feels considering my own local mall, the Charleston Town Center mall in Charleston WV, has been being slowly demolished. The core of the mall is still there but the two anchor stores of Sears and JC Penny were demolished with the latter in the last month.
@goody82az
@goody82az 28 күн бұрын
I visited this mall in 2018, my wife needed to visit a glasses store. It was dark and mostly abandoned already. Funny coincidence about your sponsor, we also used MyHeritageDNA tests that year to see our own heritage. It was interesting and we've enjoyed the conversations that resulted from it. Actually, I think I can give this mall credit for me eventually finding your channel. I was intrigued by it and started watching Dan Bell's dead mall videos. That linked my youtube to recommend The Proper People.
@Nubbyman15
@Nubbyman15 27 күн бұрын
The bears were part of the Leonard beartsein symphony orchestra. They had arm, mouth, and head movements, they performed at the Milwaukee grand avenue mall from 1999-2017. I hope this was helpful.
@alantherock225
@alantherock225 27 күн бұрын
The old food court was so much better. It also had an arcade. Looking back it really did feel like the beginning of the end when they made those changes. Also, you are correct in that it was very awkward having to go through Belk to get to the other side of the mall.
@suzannecontant
@suzannecontant 27 күн бұрын
Malls were such a staple of my childhood and teenage years. It's incredible to watch them all just...fall down now.
@kyoakland
@kyoakland 4 күн бұрын
Same
@BSGSV
@BSGSV 28 күн бұрын
This was before DIY mechanical keyboards were a thing. 12:03 That dead space is not likely because they weren't expecting big crowds. Malls of that era were packed. Most likely the tables were removed and sold/stored as the place was shutting down.
@carlfrisby7961
@carlfrisby7961 28 күн бұрын
Man, used to go to this mall for the theater and the Barnes and Nobles routinely when I was in college maybe 10 years ago. Would have loved to see this Mall in it's prime and not on the downward spiral.
@christophercatoe8841
@christophercatoe8841 28 күн бұрын
We used to go there when we were in college too back in circa 06' It looked remarkably similar to what it looks like now. Sadly this is one of the few malls that never really had a heyday and struggled for it's whole life.
@steadholderharrington9035
@steadholderharrington9035 28 күн бұрын
80's malls were awesome places to hang out in.
@ashleybrooke2087
@ashleybrooke2087 27 күн бұрын
It's kind of sobering to me when I remember being a kid & enchanted by exploring the malls & never once thinking they wouldn't be there in twenty or thirty years. It makes me feel so old.
@alantherock225
@alantherock225 27 күн бұрын
@@christophercatoe8841 It was actually pretty full in the 90s. I would definitely say it had a heyday...it just didn't last very long.
@growingup15
@growingup15 27 күн бұрын
It was pretty full in the 90s when I went when I was little. I remember the Disney Store in there and I remember going to see Santa every December :)
@minimusmax
@minimusmax 28 күн бұрын
Man, I miss the 1980s/90s aesthetic
@jscountrygirl85_326
@jscountrygirl85_326 28 күн бұрын
So do I. Much better than the modern boring, bland, cold, sterile, soulless look.
@OriginalBongoliath
@OriginalBongoliath 28 күн бұрын
@@jscountrygirl85_326 A sign of the times. 80's-90's was vibrant and peak civilization. Now squandered and shit.
@higgdynamics
@higgdynamics 27 күн бұрын
Agreed. Can't stand how everything is grey now
@cris_261
@cris_261 27 күн бұрын
And the malls from the 70s with their water features and planters were equally amazing.
@jscountrygirl85_326
@jscountrygirl85_326 27 күн бұрын
@@cris_261 Some of the malls we went to regularly still had planters and fountains well into the 90s and early 2000s. I loved them and miss them! The mid-late 2000s is when a lot of malls started renovating into the ugly modern look.
@AtlNo1Brave
@AtlNo1Brave 6 күн бұрын
This is soooo nostalgic for me. No lie, I used to set up Christmas decorations each year in that mall. We set up that animatronic bear concert band each fall, and set up a stage over that fountain area by the elevator that had a fireplace, and some other house type things. And we'd fill up the outsides of the fountain with white Styrofoam popcorn to simulate snow. I used to have a blast climbing up the outside of the elevator to hang wreaths. Seeing how it has deteriorated over the years has been kinda sad and crazy! Oh, and don't ask me how many busted tiles I helped replace throughout that mall. Haha Thanks for the video!
@AerialBadgerRelease
@AerialBadgerRelease 27 күн бұрын
I lived near here throughout the '90s and in the early '00s. Richland Fashion Mall felt like a big, open, bright, brass & glass crystal palace and was one of the two main malls in Columbia. The movie theater on the top was the main spot we saw every new release up to the Recession. The Harbison area far out of town began expanding in the late '90s and by the '00s had quadrupled in size, drawing lots of the shopping traffic from Columbia Mall, Dutch Square, and Richland Fashion. I love seeing it memorialized and appreciated here.
@train3616
@train3616 28 күн бұрын
"An escalator can never break. It can only become stairs."
@mike-vo8im
@mike-vo8im 28 күн бұрын
One thing I noticed whenever something gets repurposed for office space it closes not long after.
@AyyyGabagool
@AyyyGabagool 15 күн бұрын
man... what they did to that original, beautiful, immaculate food court is seriously an affront to all that is holy. jeeeez...
@davesendit1348
@davesendit1348 7 күн бұрын
This and the TRW video are my favourite so far. There is just something so enthralling about the 80’s. It feels like the world failed to become the place the 80’s promised.
@lindaelliott184
@lindaelliott184 28 күн бұрын
You guys are always stretching it a bit - I appreciated the use of the original promo, slipping right into your intro. Nice. As a former mall rat, I was surprised by the rooftop parking and that a mall of that size had unknown anchor tenants. This was a great way to kick off the weekend, thanks!
@EphemeralProductions
@EphemeralProductions 27 күн бұрын
What do you mean by stretching it a bit?
@andrewwhite5194
@andrewwhite5194 25 күн бұрын
Those weren't really unknown department stores in the South... JB White's was really big, as was Dillards and Belk.
@TheNewgreatlife
@TheNewgreatlife 25 күн бұрын
@@andrewwhite5194 They're probably referring to Bonwit Teller and Parisian. No one in the South ever heard of Bonwit. Parisian was unfamiliar to most people outside of Alabama before the 90s and Dillard's was unfamiliar to the Southeast before the 90s. J.B. White (and later Belk) was the figurative AND literal centerpiece of this mall and the only department store that was well known in the state at the time. If it wasn't for that store, this mall would've never seen even the small ounce of success it ever saw.
@HolliG
@HolliG 26 күн бұрын
Richland Mall was never a super busy mall. It is where all the "mall walkers" went so they could do laps without too many crowds. It only ever got busy around the holidays. Columbia Mall saw a lot more traffic, especially with the younger crowd. Columbiana Mall is still doing pretty good. As hot as it gets here, I wish indoor shopping malls weren't on the way out.
@JJacobs803
@JJacobs803 9 күн бұрын
Was never is wrong mall was very popular from the 60s to the early 2000s
@HolliG
@HolliG 9 күн бұрын
⁠@@JJacobs8031960 was when it was an open air mall. I’m talking about the enclosed mall built in the 80s. I went there multiple times as a kid in the 80s and 90s and remember it being way less crowded than Columbia Mall and Columbiana which is still going pretty strong.
@donnieracer
@donnieracer 15 күн бұрын
You Guys have always Kicked A**. I've been a subscriber of yours for years...NEVER have I been disappointed. Thanks you so much.Take care and stay safe 🤗...Donnie
@frozenpine1781
@frozenpine1781 3 күн бұрын
You are so incredibly close to my home. I spent many years breaking into Richland mall and skating with my friends.
@djdeich
@djdeich 29 күн бұрын
They must've had an insane electricity bill with all the incandescent lighting. Also the janitors problably spent most of their duty constantly changing light bulbs and (in the recent years) building improvised waterslides or emptying water buckets. Crazy job.
@sunshine3914
@sunshine3914 28 күн бұрын
Massive air conditioners
@jgood005
@jgood005 28 күн бұрын
Changing high light bulbs isn't necessarily that hard. They make long handled extension poles that can grab and twist them from ground level.
@viktorakhmedov3442
@viktorakhmedov3442 20 күн бұрын
@@jgood005 Until it snaps off and you have to walk all the way back to operations and get the cherry picker, then find the breaker so you don't get killed and remove the glassy stump. Trust me, been there. My building had such lights on a 35 foot atrium ceiling, try handling a 35 foot pole. You end up smacking into it and the glass part snaps off. Used to have to test smoke detectors by blowing a cigarette down a long pipe.
@GeneralChurch
@GeneralChurch 27 күн бұрын
They should convert old abandoned malls into retirement homes for Gen X and Millennial's. Keep the food court, arcade, theater and cvs or something and turn the rest into apartments.
@SRW_
@SRW_ 27 күн бұрын
The money spent to convert a mall to retirement homes etc, would have a really high return on investment that, probably wouldnt be returned by a retirement home. Or apartments, the rent would be extremely high that wouldnt be viable with the surrounding area.
@GeneralChurch
@GeneralChurch 27 күн бұрын
@@SRW_ how about investigating in currently dying but not closed and continue to use it as a mall till construction is complete and d do it bit by bit and eventually have a full takeover. I’ve seen people convert schools and baseball stadiums to apartments, if you got a major retirement home investor involved, you could easily make it happen
@SRW_
@SRW_ 27 күн бұрын
@@GeneralChurch But you said “convert” which means making the mall into the apartments. So your doing construction while using it as a mall. Possible yes but not appeasing to shop near a construction site.
@GeneralChurch
@GeneralChurch 27 күн бұрын
@@SRW_ it’s better than tearing it down or letting a dead mall rot. Example, not far from me is a mall, half is closed off because they can’t find tenants and it’s starting to look visually ugly. Start a take over, work on that whole side, project a close date for the mall, and work bit by bit after that. Keep restaurants that have outside access as well as theaters so regular people can enjoy them, but block off the interior as a renters only area with stores specifically for them or food courts, arcades etc. it’s pretty easy to do while phasing out
@oldtwinsna8347
@oldtwinsna8347 13 күн бұрын
It's not feasible outside of areas with very tight and limited real estate. The cost of upgrading a building is hideously high as well, just easier to graze the existing structures and build anew. The appraised land value of these places are just too high so a developer looking into building residential units would find much cheaper land options elsewhere. Else, the cost is just passed on and you'd have units that are bought as investment properties, i.e. not as actual dwellings for people to live in.
@tiaanengelbrecht
@tiaanengelbrecht 28 күн бұрын
Thumbnail has some serious Rolling Giant energy
@AmyILYSM1
@AmyILYSM1 28 күн бұрын
facts
@Woolong742
@Woolong742 28 күн бұрын
I legitimately thought this was part of that series from the thumbnail.
@VenityGT
@VenityGT 27 күн бұрын
The Rolling Ginger
@higgdynamics
@higgdynamics 28 күн бұрын
I live next to a mall that is alwyas changing - office space, empty stores, shifting food court, ever-changing stores - feels like the beginning of the end. I enjoy your videos but I find myself feeling sadly nostalgic for my youth when watching you wander an abandoned mall
@loyalninecoffee2024
@loyalninecoffee2024 28 күн бұрын
Nothing beats a well done dead mall video. Well done gentlemen!
@map3384
@map3384 24 күн бұрын
In 1988 I was 22 years old. You wouldn’t believe how great of a time it was. The mall reflected America and the country was booming. You went there for everything. When you began dating your girlfriend it’s off to the mall for shopping, dinner and a movie. Then you bought an engagement ring at the jewelry store. It’s depressing what has happened. It’s not the country I remember.
@Al_Dente-d1p
@Al_Dente-d1p 20 күн бұрын
@@map3384 um. Get a life?
@viktorakhmedov3442
@viktorakhmedov3442 20 күн бұрын
REASON IS DEMOCRATS GOP WAS IN RULING POWER IN 1988 ECONOMY ALWAYS EXPAND WHEN GOP IN RULING POWER TRUMP 2024 OR ELSE
@chfpontiac5849
@chfpontiac5849 19 күн бұрын
​@@Al_Dente-d1p Keep spreading the cheer there, Mr. Happy! 🎉🤗
@elliesloan7084
@elliesloan7084 18 күн бұрын
im 16 rn, you are (roughly) around the age of my paternal grandparents, maybe a few years younger. it makes me sad to know i will never experience the world they talk about, and that none of my relatives understand how depressing and hard it is these days. i wish id got to experience the malls of the 80s, and the wealth and prospects everyone felt were guaranteed with a little elbow grease- it just feels so hollow and pointless nowadays, and theres no one to turn to for advice cos no one gets it. glad to see some of your generation understand just how different our lives are nowadays :/
@map3384
@map3384 18 күн бұрын
@@Al_Dente-d1p I have more of a life than you do.
@Swampfox-tr1rk
@Swampfox-tr1rk 26 күн бұрын
I used to go there when it was an open air mall in the 60's.
@derrenleepoole
@derrenleepoole 19 күн бұрын
Dan Bell vibes on the intro. Liminal spaces/backroom vibes in the offices spaces. Kane Pixels Oldest View vibes in the mall. Great explore.
@misschaotic3694
@misschaotic3694 27 күн бұрын
Your abandoned malls episodes are my favorites because I get the 80s nostalgia .. You really made my day
@melissawo4672
@melissawo4672 28 күн бұрын
those 3 colors gold teal pink always seem be a theme
@viktorakhmedov3442
@viktorakhmedov3442 26 күн бұрын
It was EVERYWHERE from 1986-1993. Then greens and purples started coming in for the latter half of the 90s and the brass went away and was replaced by silver.
@2StrokeDriptroit
@2StrokeDriptroit 19 сағат бұрын
Hi. Guys! Rick Delair here! The loud buzzing was dry type transformers that step the 277/Y/480 volts down to 120/Y/208 volts for mostly 120 volt loads like incandescent lights and receptacles. The fluorescent and any HID lights were run in the 277/480 volt line, with them wired phase to neutral at 277 volts. The 120/208 volt stepped down lines could also supply 208 volt, usually 3 phase loads like electric motors, snd single phase for any 208 volt HID lights. 480 could also supply motors as well. There was 2 panels with the transformer between to supply both 3 phase voltage ranges. CFL bulbs replacing incandescent was an indicator of how long it was abandoned. LED has been standard for a while now, and I am using a fair amount of myself now. Crazy that incandescent is pretty much gone, as is fluorescent and HID. And yes, cool white 4100 K sucks! I would actually think those offices had mid range 3500K or even 3000 K warm white. Also possible is the crisp blue-white 6500 K Daylight or the super nasty 5000 K snow white, actually worse than 4100 K cool white! 🤮🤮🤮 the 6500 Daylight is actually not terrible, though. Cheers! 😋😋
@grilled_cheez
@grilled_cheez 27 күн бұрын
Being from Birmingham, seeing that old Parisian logo is sending me back in time! 🤩
@cjpro2517
@cjpro2517 28 күн бұрын
now this is something i can watch while im supposed to be asleep
@EniesLobby
@EniesLobby 27 күн бұрын
As always, I greatly appreciate you guys' dedication and care in documenting these abandoned spaces. I also worry intensely about the condition of your lungs with all the mold and mildew exposure.
@briannak1988
@briannak1988 15 күн бұрын
Wished yall could have seen it back it the day. It was super beautiful at night with all the lights.
@thepinkyprincesspoetc.a.5767
@thepinkyprincesspoetc.a.5767 20 күн бұрын
In the 70’s and 80’s that Theater Seating was EVERYWHERE… brought back so many memories to see it. I even remember the great big Single theaters they used to have back in the 70s when I saw the towering inferno and earthquake at the Fox theater in Provo Utah. It’s now in the history book sadly and a McDonald’s took its place.😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢 Thank you for the memories.❤❤❤❤
@Replicanna-rl6zg
@Replicanna-rl6zg 7 күн бұрын
The style of the interior is so re- art deco, amazing! The colours, the fixtures, the overall design, beautiful. They just cheaped out on plumming I guess. Great explore, I envy all the proper people that were able to see it on its glorious days
@ugaldk31
@ugaldk31 28 күн бұрын
That gingerbread snowman was definitely the star of the episode. Nice one, guys! Thanks for the great video!
@TouringBackroadsFrance
@TouringBackroadsFrance 25 күн бұрын
I don't know if I trust him though 🙂
@waynetaylor8082
@waynetaylor8082 28 күн бұрын
In the wisdom of Mitch Hedberg, a broken escalator is basically a flight of stairs😅😅😅.
@SharkDude1
@SharkDude1 27 күн бұрын
I never miss an episode of 'The Proper People' You guys show so much history that everyone should see. It's truly amazing. Love your work.
@Zer0suM207
@Zer0suM207 27 күн бұрын
The special intro really set the mood! I super appreciate the full run time (feels like forever since we've had a proper nearly 1 hour video). Excellent exploration as always.
@Draconiangem
@Draconiangem 27 күн бұрын
That gingerbread cutout is giving me “Rolling Giant” vibes. Just needs wheels!
@generalcorgi698
@generalcorgi698 27 күн бұрын
That's what I thought too
@goblue5480
@goblue5480 28 күн бұрын
The only other rooftop parking I've seen was a video about this..... Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. "On April 23, 1988, within minutes of the grand opening of a new Save-On-Foods store, a 6,400 square foot portion of the roof collapsed, sending the rooftop parking deck and 20 automobiles crashing into the produce section below."
@TheNewgreatlife
@TheNewgreatlife 25 күн бұрын
omg. I wonder if this was the Algo Centre Mall? Something similar happened there and it was a mall in Canada.
@nickthaskater
@nickthaskater 22 күн бұрын
Lots of rooftop parking around Vancouver, BC
@DerZardoz
@DerZardoz 27 күн бұрын
Nice! Live 5 mins from this mall in Columbia. Used to frequent this place regularly in the early 90s when it was in its prime. After most of the anchors closed they chopped it up and turned a large part into office space, been going down hill slowly after that. Sad to see it finally go.
@christopherlampman8078
@christopherlampman8078 14 күн бұрын
This is not far from my home. Years ago I did the landscaping at this property. I have watched this building slowly die. So eerie to see this.
@kevinfelix2543
@kevinfelix2543 Ай бұрын
Makes my day every time a notification pops up for a new video :)
@FatherMcKenzie66
@FatherMcKenzie66 28 күн бұрын
Aw man that’s so sad to see it decaying like that
@Callus1234
@Callus1234 28 күн бұрын
They are tearing it down now
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