Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza gets a new owner with plans to modernize the center
LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 08: A shopper goes up in the escalator in Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza on Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2020 in Los Angeles, CA. The Baldwin Hills mall is on the market and has very low visitors each day. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
A shopper rides on the escalator in Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza on Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2020. A new owner has plans to modernize the struggling regional mall. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza, a regional mall that has served the South Los Angeles community for many decades, has been sold to a local developer who plans to transform the struggling center into a more modern complex with housing, offices, stores and restaurants.

The deal, valued at more than $140 million, ended a contentious sale process that lasted nearly two years and saw other would-be buyers drop out in the face of pressure from a group of neighborhood activists who hoped to acquire the property themselves and develop it as a community-owned project.

Harridge Development Group bought the mall from a Chicago private equity fund for about $111 million, said David Schwartzman, chief executive of Harridge. His company also bought the Macy's department store building in the mall in a separate transaction of more than $30 million with Macy's Inc., he said, giving Harridge control of almost the entire 42-acre site that straddles Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard at Crenshaw Boulevard.

Schwarzman said he plans to start building housing on a parking lot near an Albertsons grocery store within a year and a half and move on to other additions and improvements while keeping the mall operating. The entire project will cost about $1 billion including the purchase price, he said, and could take as long as seven years.

"It's an iconic piece of property with a tremendous amount of cultural significance," he said. "The area is going through a huge revitalization and we think this is an amazing opportunity to do a mix of housing, retail and office all in one location."

Contributing to revitalization in the area is a light-rail line under construction that will connect the Crenshaw neighborhood to the region's Metro train system by next year and include an underground stop at the mall.

Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza traces its roots to 1947 with the opening of two department stores, complemented by shops and restaurants. In the 1980s, Mayor Tom Bradley wanted to see a major shopping center in the neighborhood and encouraged linking the stores to create an indoor mall that was completed in 1988.

Previous owners finished a $35-million upgrade in 2012 that included a new food court, 15-screen theater complex and other improvements in an effort to pump more life into the mall.

Indoor malls have often struggled in recent years as their department store anchors fell out of favor with many shoppers who increasingly bought products online or went to outdoor "lifestyle" centers that mixed food and entertainment with shopping. The pandemic proved to be another blow for Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza as wary shoppers stayed home.