The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The article does not meet
WP:GNG or
WP:BUILD: "Buildings, including private residences and commercial developments, may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance, but they require significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability." Subject does not have coverage that meets significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability.
WP:BEFORE revealed advertising,
WP:ROUTINE coverage of events and directory style listings. //
Timothy :: talk03:54, 20 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Keep Seems to be a development that was significant to the city and attracted sustained coverage over time. According to the LA Times (1990), the plaza contributed 15% of Hawthorne's sales tax revenue. Significant coverage includes:
Keep per coverage above and already in article, sourcing is more than sufficient. Also further asserted in use of the former building in several movie and TV shows. Ten Pound Hammer • (
What did I screw up now?)03:34, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Comment The above are all routine news coverage that any mall would receive; it does not demonstrate notability.
WP:NBUILD says that ""Buildings, including private residences and commercial developments, may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance, but they require significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability." Nothing above touches on historic, social, or architectural importance (and significant coverage means addressing the subject directly and in depth). Economic significance is refuted by the fact that it is a dead mall. If someone disagrees, please state which sources show historic, social, economic, or architectural importance. //
Timothy :: talk03:47, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
@
TimothyBlue: You really don't think that "used in a ton of movies and TV shows" is "historical or social importance", nor the fact that a structure in a major city has been sitting abandoned for 21 years? Ten Pound Hammer • (
What did I screw up now?)03:53, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply: No I don't. Being a movie set for several movies is not historic (especially in Los Angeles) and what social importance does being a movie set for a few days have? What social impact did being a movie set have? Being an abandoned property for 21 years is not notable, if anything it shows how unnotable the mall is. //
Timothy :: talk04:04, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply: Don't be sarcastic, I gave you an honest reply. Guidelines are not just random arbitrary statements, there is a purpose to them. I see this as wheat and chaff. If we have 2000 articles for American malls (don't know the actual number), but only 200 are genuinely noteworthy, the 200 (10%) will be obscured by the other 1800 (90%). Removing non-notable malls, helps the visibility of notable ones. If all readers see when they look at malls, is open, renovate, close, boring routine items, they will miss the truly interesting and noteworthy malls. I believe this is what
WP:NBUILD is going for when it says "may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance".
Is there some historical importance, such as the malls that were the first of their kind? I'm thinking here of the same way department stores are viewed, every department store is not notable, but the first department stores were pioneers, those have a history that is interesting and notable.
Social, a small/average mall in an urban area not socially notable, it's just one among a vast array of social environments. But a mall in a small town may be the center of the community and a significant part of the social fabric, not duplicated in other places.
Architectural speaks for itself, there are lots of architectural journals and magazines and if they cover a mall because of its design, then I see that as an indication something about the mall is notable and this can be in the article.
Economic, I'd go to the social reason above. A mall in a large urban area is going to make a negligible impact on the economy, even if it makes good money. But a mall in a small town may be a significant part of the local economy, even if it makes a fraction of the money the mall in an urban area does. In the same way as a factory in a city with a huge manufacturing base like Los Angeles or New York wouldn't be notable, but if you move that same factory to a small town, it could be the lifeblood of the economy, if it closed the town would (and sadly have) dry up.
*"Historical": "every department store is not notable, but the first department stores were pioneers." So by that logic, Bon Marche in Paris is notable because it was a first, whereas Kohl's, Burlington, and J.C. Penney aren't notable at all because they weren't the first of anything nor did they pioneer anything.
"separating the wheat from the chaff.... helps the visibility of notable ones." That's like saying that a musician who never entered the Hot 100 (for example
The Forester Sisters, which is a
WP:GA) should be deleted so that an article on, say,
Maroon 5 or
Metallica can have its visibility helped, whatever that means. Because by your standards, the Forester Sisters were just a "routine" band who routinely got together, routinely released singles and albums, routinely got reviews from routine music reviewers, and routinely broke up like most other bands do.
"it's just one among a vast array of social environment". So by your logic,
Northland Center is notable because it was one of the first and a "pioneer", whereas literally every other mall in Metro Detroit is "just one among a vast array" and therefore not notable. Not even the one that had the very first
American Eagle Outfitters in it, huh? Because it's in a mall that's "just one among a vast array" by not being notable in any other fashion.
"Architectural speaks for itself". Not every structure has to be architecturally notable. Again, I guess that means that
Forest Fair Village is just another run-of-the-mill, routine mall that routinely got built and routinely died because it didn't have anything significant from a structural standpoint.
" A mall in a large urban area is going to make a negligible impact on the economy, even if it makes good money." How much is non negligible by your standards? Is
Colonial Plaza no longer notable because it got torn down?
Rolling Acres Mall is not notable because it didn't make enough money and failed?
If you contrast
Tri-City Pavilions with other GA-class mall articles like
Colonial Plaza or
Forest Fair Village (again, both of which are GAs), then you will see that the scope of coverage is exactly the same. But by your standards, not notable because they're "routine", "not historical", and their removal will "help the visibility of notable ones", whatever the hell that means.
Wikipedia does not have a limited amount of storage space so it's not like there's a pressing reason to "separat[e] the wheat from the chaff". Again, that's like saying that lesser-known, defunct bands should have their articles deleted, or that canceled TV shows should have their articles deleted to "increase the visibility" of currently-airing shows. Are
The Forester Sisters "chaff" because they're "routine" and no longer active? Is
Lonestar "chaff" because they haven't had a hit single in years? Is
Joe Diffie "chaff" because he's no longer alive? Is
Colonial Plaza "chaff" because it was torn down? Is
Rolling Acres Mall "chaff" because it was torn down? You seem to be concocting an utterly absurd and overly narrow view of notability that in no way lines up with
WP:GNG. Ten Pound Hammer • (
What did I screw up now?)04:39, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply First, these are not my standards. I am discussing it from the guidelines.
The
WP:NBUILD is not an all of the above requirement.
Le Bon Marché may (I haven't looked) have importance architecturally or historically. JC Penny may be notable due to social or historic reasons, even though it is failing economically and their store (as far as I know) have no architectural importance. This will be reflected in the sources.
If something is important architecturally it will be covered by architectural journals and magazines, or by articles from historical preservation societies. The same is true about economics; if something is economically significant it will be reflected in the sources. I don't have a standard,
WP:NBUILD is a standard and it requires significant coverage showing why something is "worthy of note". The comparison of musical groups or television shows to shopping malls is
Apples and oranges, they are entirely different and have different standards of notability. Much of the rest of your reasoning is simple
WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS.
When you attempt to get personal with comments such the ones above, you're only showing emotion that betrays the weakness of your reasoning and evidence. //
Timothy :: talk05:05, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Keep. The sources that Calliopejen1 presented above show that there is pretty significant coverage for this topic. I disagree with the nominator that "If all readers see when they look at malls, is open, renovate, close, boring routine items, they will miss the truly interesting and noteworthy malls." Notability is not assessed in relation to other subjects, and openings, renovations, and closures are not necessarily "routine". These sources show that there's some pretty specific coverage of this mall in third-party reliable sources, which is enough to meet
WP:GNG. Just because a mall is dead does not mean that it automatically becomes insignificant - see
WP:NOTTEMPORARY.Further, I'm not convinced that this automatically fails NBUILD. According to
WP:NBUILD, "Buildings, including private residences and commercial developments, may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance, but they require significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability." The requirement is that such buildings need significant coverage by reliable third-party sources. Historical, social, economic, or architectural significance is an ancillary, and will be demonstrated by whether the topic meets the GNG.
epicgenius (
talk)
18:52, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply: None of the sources provides any evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD. It's all routine coverage or promo pieces. You could find articles like these for every single mall. These sources show that this was just an average mall; a number of people have looked and none have come up with a single source that shows this mall has historic, social, economic, or architectural importance. It was so completely average that even when some people tried to revive it, the plans failed.
Construction Under Way at Hawthorne Plaza Site". Los Angeles Times.
Dead link
✘No
Jeff Arellano (October 2, 2005). "Hawthorne Mall: Hawthorne California".
It's a simple blog entry on a site about Dead Malls. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Williams, J (30 June 2014). "Watch: Exploring the Spooky Abandoned Hawthorne Mall".
One paragraph promo about "Tom goes inside the abandoned Hawthorne Plaza mall" Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Hernandez, Miriam (19 November 2014). "Hawthorne staging comeback with outlet mall". KABC-TV.
Short routine coverage about a possible plan to become an outlet mall. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Mazza, Sandy (18 February 2016). "Ambitious new plans emerge for abandoned Hawthorne Plaza mall". Daily Breeze
Dead link
✘No
"Hawthorne Happenings March 10, 2016". City of Hawthorne. 10 March 2016.
Financial interest in tax revenue
It's a city community events calendar page
It says nothing about the mall
✘No
azza, Sandy (12 February 2018). "Makeover of decrepit Hawthorne Plaza Mall canceled again". The Daily Breeze.
Dead link
✘No
This table may not be a final or consensus view; it may summarize developing consensus, or reflect assessments of a single editor. Created using {{source assess table}}.
Kowsky, Kim. "YOU ARE HERE Reaching Out to an Ethnically Mixed Clientele: [South Bay Edition]." Los Angeles Times
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Gnerre, Sam. "SOUTH BAY HISTORY: Hawthorne Plaza." Daily Breeze
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Sandell, Scott. "Hawthorne Plaza Shops Around for a Way to Survive Slump Retail...Los Angeles Times
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Glover, Kara and Anne Rackham. "Hawthorne Mall Faces an Uncertain Future." Los Angeles Business
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Mazza, Sandy. "Hawthorne Mall Stalls Over Housing." Daily Breeze, Oct 10, 2010.
Is not about the mall. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
"Shopper's Paradise each Center Tries to Carve its Niche with Own Personality: [South Bay Edition]." Los Angeles Times
Short promo piece. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Mazza, Sandy. "Mall Makeover Mired in Debate." Daily Breeze, Jun 22, 2008
Is not about the mall. Its about a stalled plan to possibly make over the mall. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
This table may not be a final or consensus view; it may summarize developing consensus, or reflect assessments of a single editor. Created using {{source assess table}}.
Comment The sources above and in the article are all routine run of the mill coverage and announcements. They do not establish notability. Every mall will have lots of routine coverage because they seek it out as advertising. If this type of coverage makes a mall notable, then every mall will be notable. //
Timothy :: talk02:26, 31 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Then let it? Notability has been established for "run of the mill" plazas on here because of having reliable sources (newspapers) and verifiability. Anchor stores are usually the long term leasees of the property. Depending on the anchor store, they might have also bought the overall land. That information usually suffices
WP:GNG. –
The Grid (
talk)
02:53, 1 September 2020 (UTC)reply
I got curious for possible sources:
This provides some history of its beginnings. It verifies the February 1977 opening and 1999 closure.
[1]
This is a blog but it looks like the newspaper articles references can be verified. Note I didn't bother to view anything about its usage as an abandoned site.
[2]
Comment for closer: since there is an
RfC currently under discussion at AfD about what is considered proper sourcing for determining mall notabiity, it may be worth holding these open until that is finished. If a close is made, it would be very helpful for the RfC if you could explain how you evaluated the sources in terms of notability, routine, run of the mill coverage, and how you feel voting and !voting influenced this AfD. Thank you, //
Timothy :: talk09:16, 4 September 2020 (UTC)reply
That was the opinion of a single individual, not a consensus. At ANI the consensus in the close was stated, "You and others suggested, reasonably, that some the guidelines for malls should be developed and clarified, and in fact constructive discussion about a potential WP:SNG is ongoing at Wikipedia talk:Articles for deletion#RfC on shopping malls and notability guidelines.". Let the closer have all of the information and they can decide. There is no hurry to close these only to have them reopened at DR as a result of the RfC. //
Timothy :: talk20:31, 4 September 2020 (UTC)reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The article does not meet
WP:GNG or
WP:BUILD: "Buildings, including private residences and commercial developments, may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance, but they require significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability." Subject does not have coverage that meets significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability.
WP:BEFORE revealed advertising,
WP:ROUTINE coverage of events and directory style listings. //
Timothy :: talk03:54, 20 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Keep Seems to be a development that was significant to the city and attracted sustained coverage over time. According to the LA Times (1990), the plaza contributed 15% of Hawthorne's sales tax revenue. Significant coverage includes:
Keep per coverage above and already in article, sourcing is more than sufficient. Also further asserted in use of the former building in several movie and TV shows. Ten Pound Hammer • (
What did I screw up now?)03:34, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Comment The above are all routine news coverage that any mall would receive; it does not demonstrate notability.
WP:NBUILD says that ""Buildings, including private residences and commercial developments, may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance, but they require significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability." Nothing above touches on historic, social, or architectural importance (and significant coverage means addressing the subject directly and in depth). Economic significance is refuted by the fact that it is a dead mall. If someone disagrees, please state which sources show historic, social, economic, or architectural importance. //
Timothy :: talk03:47, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
@
TimothyBlue: You really don't think that "used in a ton of movies and TV shows" is "historical or social importance", nor the fact that a structure in a major city has been sitting abandoned for 21 years? Ten Pound Hammer • (
What did I screw up now?)03:53, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply: No I don't. Being a movie set for several movies is not historic (especially in Los Angeles) and what social importance does being a movie set for a few days have? What social impact did being a movie set have? Being an abandoned property for 21 years is not notable, if anything it shows how unnotable the mall is. //
Timothy :: talk04:04, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply: Don't be sarcastic, I gave you an honest reply. Guidelines are not just random arbitrary statements, there is a purpose to them. I see this as wheat and chaff. If we have 2000 articles for American malls (don't know the actual number), but only 200 are genuinely noteworthy, the 200 (10%) will be obscured by the other 1800 (90%). Removing non-notable malls, helps the visibility of notable ones. If all readers see when they look at malls, is open, renovate, close, boring routine items, they will miss the truly interesting and noteworthy malls. I believe this is what
WP:NBUILD is going for when it says "may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance".
Is there some historical importance, such as the malls that were the first of their kind? I'm thinking here of the same way department stores are viewed, every department store is not notable, but the first department stores were pioneers, those have a history that is interesting and notable.
Social, a small/average mall in an urban area not socially notable, it's just one among a vast array of social environments. But a mall in a small town may be the center of the community and a significant part of the social fabric, not duplicated in other places.
Architectural speaks for itself, there are lots of architectural journals and magazines and if they cover a mall because of its design, then I see that as an indication something about the mall is notable and this can be in the article.
Economic, I'd go to the social reason above. A mall in a large urban area is going to make a negligible impact on the economy, even if it makes good money. But a mall in a small town may be a significant part of the local economy, even if it makes a fraction of the money the mall in an urban area does. In the same way as a factory in a city with a huge manufacturing base like Los Angeles or New York wouldn't be notable, but if you move that same factory to a small town, it could be the lifeblood of the economy, if it closed the town would (and sadly have) dry up.
*"Historical": "every department store is not notable, but the first department stores were pioneers." So by that logic, Bon Marche in Paris is notable because it was a first, whereas Kohl's, Burlington, and J.C. Penney aren't notable at all because they weren't the first of anything nor did they pioneer anything.
"separating the wheat from the chaff.... helps the visibility of notable ones." That's like saying that a musician who never entered the Hot 100 (for example
The Forester Sisters, which is a
WP:GA) should be deleted so that an article on, say,
Maroon 5 or
Metallica can have its visibility helped, whatever that means. Because by your standards, the Forester Sisters were just a "routine" band who routinely got together, routinely released singles and albums, routinely got reviews from routine music reviewers, and routinely broke up like most other bands do.
"it's just one among a vast array of social environment". So by your logic,
Northland Center is notable because it was one of the first and a "pioneer", whereas literally every other mall in Metro Detroit is "just one among a vast array" and therefore not notable. Not even the one that had the very first
American Eagle Outfitters in it, huh? Because it's in a mall that's "just one among a vast array" by not being notable in any other fashion.
"Architectural speaks for itself". Not every structure has to be architecturally notable. Again, I guess that means that
Forest Fair Village is just another run-of-the-mill, routine mall that routinely got built and routinely died because it didn't have anything significant from a structural standpoint.
" A mall in a large urban area is going to make a negligible impact on the economy, even if it makes good money." How much is non negligible by your standards? Is
Colonial Plaza no longer notable because it got torn down?
Rolling Acres Mall is not notable because it didn't make enough money and failed?
If you contrast
Tri-City Pavilions with other GA-class mall articles like
Colonial Plaza or
Forest Fair Village (again, both of which are GAs), then you will see that the scope of coverage is exactly the same. But by your standards, not notable because they're "routine", "not historical", and their removal will "help the visibility of notable ones", whatever the hell that means.
Wikipedia does not have a limited amount of storage space so it's not like there's a pressing reason to "separat[e] the wheat from the chaff". Again, that's like saying that lesser-known, defunct bands should have their articles deleted, or that canceled TV shows should have their articles deleted to "increase the visibility" of currently-airing shows. Are
The Forester Sisters "chaff" because they're "routine" and no longer active? Is
Lonestar "chaff" because they haven't had a hit single in years? Is
Joe Diffie "chaff" because he's no longer alive? Is
Colonial Plaza "chaff" because it was torn down? Is
Rolling Acres Mall "chaff" because it was torn down? You seem to be concocting an utterly absurd and overly narrow view of notability that in no way lines up with
WP:GNG. Ten Pound Hammer • (
What did I screw up now?)04:39, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply First, these are not my standards. I am discussing it from the guidelines.
The
WP:NBUILD is not an all of the above requirement.
Le Bon Marché may (I haven't looked) have importance architecturally or historically. JC Penny may be notable due to social or historic reasons, even though it is failing economically and their store (as far as I know) have no architectural importance. This will be reflected in the sources.
If something is important architecturally it will be covered by architectural journals and magazines, or by articles from historical preservation societies. The same is true about economics; if something is economically significant it will be reflected in the sources. I don't have a standard,
WP:NBUILD is a standard and it requires significant coverage showing why something is "worthy of note". The comparison of musical groups or television shows to shopping malls is
Apples and oranges, they are entirely different and have different standards of notability. Much of the rest of your reasoning is simple
WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS.
When you attempt to get personal with comments such the ones above, you're only showing emotion that betrays the weakness of your reasoning and evidence. //
Timothy :: talk05:05, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Keep. The sources that Calliopejen1 presented above show that there is pretty significant coverage for this topic. I disagree with the nominator that "If all readers see when they look at malls, is open, renovate, close, boring routine items, they will miss the truly interesting and noteworthy malls." Notability is not assessed in relation to other subjects, and openings, renovations, and closures are not necessarily "routine". These sources show that there's some pretty specific coverage of this mall in third-party reliable sources, which is enough to meet
WP:GNG. Just because a mall is dead does not mean that it automatically becomes insignificant - see
WP:NOTTEMPORARY.Further, I'm not convinced that this automatically fails NBUILD. According to
WP:NBUILD, "Buildings, including private residences and commercial developments, may be notable as a result of their historic, social, economic, or architectural importance, but they require significant coverage by reliable, third-party sources to establish notability." The requirement is that such buildings need significant coverage by reliable third-party sources. Historical, social, economic, or architectural significance is an ancillary, and will be demonstrated by whether the topic meets the GNG.
epicgenius (
talk)
18:52, 29 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Reply: None of the sources provides any evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD. It's all routine coverage or promo pieces. You could find articles like these for every single mall. These sources show that this was just an average mall; a number of people have looked and none have come up with a single source that shows this mall has historic, social, economic, or architectural importance. It was so completely average that even when some people tried to revive it, the plans failed.
Construction Under Way at Hawthorne Plaza Site". Los Angeles Times.
Dead link
✘No
Jeff Arellano (October 2, 2005). "Hawthorne Mall: Hawthorne California".
It's a simple blog entry on a site about Dead Malls. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Williams, J (30 June 2014). "Watch: Exploring the Spooky Abandoned Hawthorne Mall".
One paragraph promo about "Tom goes inside the abandoned Hawthorne Plaza mall" Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Hernandez, Miriam (19 November 2014). "Hawthorne staging comeback with outlet mall". KABC-TV.
Short routine coverage about a possible plan to become an outlet mall. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Mazza, Sandy (18 February 2016). "Ambitious new plans emerge for abandoned Hawthorne Plaza mall". Daily Breeze
Dead link
✘No
"Hawthorne Happenings March 10, 2016". City of Hawthorne. 10 March 2016.
Financial interest in tax revenue
It's a city community events calendar page
It says nothing about the mall
✘No
azza, Sandy (12 February 2018). "Makeover of decrepit Hawthorne Plaza Mall canceled again". The Daily Breeze.
Dead link
✘No
This table may not be a final or consensus view; it may summarize developing consensus, or reflect assessments of a single editor. Created using {{source assess table}}.
Kowsky, Kim. "YOU ARE HERE Reaching Out to an Ethnically Mixed Clientele: [South Bay Edition]." Los Angeles Times
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Gnerre, Sam. "SOUTH BAY HISTORY: Hawthorne Plaza." Daily Breeze
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Sandell, Scott. "Hawthorne Plaza Shops Around for a Way to Survive Slump Retail...Los Angeles Times
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Glover, Kara and Anne Rackham. "Hawthorne Mall Faces an Uncertain Future." Los Angeles Business
Routine coverage any mall would receive. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Mazza, Sandy. "Hawthorne Mall Stalls Over Housing." Daily Breeze, Oct 10, 2010.
Is not about the mall. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
"Shopper's Paradise each Center Tries to Carve its Niche with Own Personality: [South Bay Edition]." Los Angeles Times
Short promo piece. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
Mazza, Sandy. "Mall Makeover Mired in Debate." Daily Breeze, Jun 22, 2008
Is not about the mall. Its about a stalled plan to possibly make over the mall. Provides no evidence of mall meeting
WP:NBUILD
✘No
This table may not be a final or consensus view; it may summarize developing consensus, or reflect assessments of a single editor. Created using {{source assess table}}.
Comment The sources above and in the article are all routine run of the mill coverage and announcements. They do not establish notability. Every mall will have lots of routine coverage because they seek it out as advertising. If this type of coverage makes a mall notable, then every mall will be notable. //
Timothy :: talk02:26, 31 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Then let it? Notability has been established for "run of the mill" plazas on here because of having reliable sources (newspapers) and verifiability. Anchor stores are usually the long term leasees of the property. Depending on the anchor store, they might have also bought the overall land. That information usually suffices
WP:GNG. –
The Grid (
talk)
02:53, 1 September 2020 (UTC)reply
I got curious for possible sources:
This provides some history of its beginnings. It verifies the February 1977 opening and 1999 closure.
[1]
This is a blog but it looks like the newspaper articles references can be verified. Note I didn't bother to view anything about its usage as an abandoned site.
[2]
Comment for closer: since there is an
RfC currently under discussion at AfD about what is considered proper sourcing for determining mall notabiity, it may be worth holding these open until that is finished. If a close is made, it would be very helpful for the RfC if you could explain how you evaluated the sources in terms of notability, routine, run of the mill coverage, and how you feel voting and !voting influenced this AfD. Thank you, //
Timothy :: talk09:16, 4 September 2020 (UTC)reply
That was the opinion of a single individual, not a consensus. At ANI the consensus in the close was stated, "You and others suggested, reasonably, that some the guidelines for malls should be developed and clarified, and in fact constructive discussion about a potential WP:SNG is ongoing at Wikipedia talk:Articles for deletion#RfC on shopping malls and notability guidelines.". Let the closer have all of the information and they can decide. There is no hurry to close these only to have them reopened at DR as a result of the RfC. //
Timothy :: talk20:31, 4 September 2020 (UTC)reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.