Macy's selling, closing landmark downtown Pittsburgh store

Macy’s saluted 10 decades of culture in Feb. 2014 defining African-American style with an “in conversation” discussion featuring journalist and style expert Constance White, supermodel Beverly Johnson, founder of Fashion Africana and Utopia Models Demeatria Boccella and hosted by Stephanie Taylor of the Art Institute of Pittsburgh. Pictured are Stephanie Taylor, Beverly Johnson, LaMont Jones Jr., Constance White and Demeatria Boccella. (Photo by Rossano P. Stewart)
Macy’s saluted 10 decades of culture defining African-American style in Feb. 2014 at it’s downtown location with an “in conversation” discussion featuring journalist and style expert Constance White, supermodel Beverly Johnson, founder of Fashion Africana and Utopia Models Demeatria Boccella and hosted by Stephanie Taylor of the Art Institute of Pittsburgh. Pictured are Stephanie Taylor, Beverly Johnson, LaMont Jones Jr., Constance White and Demeatria Boccella. (Photo by Rossano P. Stewart/File)

 
PITTSBURGH (AP) _ Macy’s is closing its downtown Pittsburgh location after selling the landmark building where the now-defunct Kaufmann’s chain ran its flagship store for more than a century, the retailer said Monday.
Core Realty, a Philadelphia-based developer, purchased the 13-story building and is planning a hotel and residential project, Macy’s said. The company is known in Philadelphia for transforming older spaces into office, hotel, restaurants, retail and entertainment space.
A clearance sale will run into early September.
The Fifth Avenue building opened as Kaufmann’s in 1887. Cincinnati, Ohio-based Macy’s acquired Kaufmann’s parent company in 2005.
Core pledged to preserve icons of the store’s retailing history, including the outdoor Kaufmann’s clock, Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald said.
The current version of the clock was installed at the corner of Fifth Avenue and Smithfield Street in 1913 and has been a popular meeting place, with generations of Pittsburghers telling each other: “Meet me under Kaufmann’s clock.”
Macy’s said it decided to sell to because it was only using one-third of the building’s 1.2 million square feet of space, leaving upper floors idle.
Jeff Kantor, Macy’s chief stores officer, said the company started exploring uses for the unused property four years ago.
Macy’s started working with Core Realty last year and recently decided to give up the whole building so the developer’s plans could evolve “into a more holistic project,” Kantor said.
“We believe this will be an outstanding addition to the downtown Pittsburgh community in an important location in the heart of the city,” Kantor said.
Macy’s said laid off employees will be offered severance package. Some may be offered positions in nearby stores.
About 30 district office employees will move to another Pittsburgh-area Macy’s.
 

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