With the rise of online shopping and changing consumer preferences, American malls have increasingly fallen out of fashion.
Hundreds of malls have shut down in the past few decades, and about 15% of malls could disappear in the next 10 years, according to a recent report.
More than 3,500 mall stores are also projected to close in the first half of 2017, including anchor tenants like Sears and Macy’s— which most malls financially depend on to survive.
Many dead malls still lie abandoned today. But some are luckier — they find developers willing to renovate them into buildings with new uses, like apartment complexes, medical facilities, and even churches.
Take a look at some of those transformations below.
SEE ALSO: Inside Sears' death spiral: How an iconic American brand has been driven to the edge of bankruptcy
Antioch, Tennessee's Hickory Hollow Mall was hollowed out in 2011 after its two main department stores went bankrupt.
Source: WKRN
After undergoing a facelift, the building re-opened as the Global Mall at the Crossings in 2013. It's now a satellite campus of Nashville State Community college, and includes 617,000-square-feet of retail space, a recreation center, classrooms, a library, and an ice rink.
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Source: WKRN
Mayfield Mall in Mountain View, California shut down due to declining sales in 1983, when HP moved in and transformed the building into offices.
Source: Silicon Valley Business Journal
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