Eventually the mall just started to go downhill. One reason for this was that gangs of rowdy kids started hanging out there and the mall management didn't know how to handle the situation and so just let it ride. After a while the families who spent the money stopped going to the mall because of the constant threat of crime. After years and years of this, most of the anchor tenants started pulling out, sub-letting their spaces to discount stores or just allowing them to sit vacant. The last of the supporting big-box retailers to give up the ghost was Sears. When Sears leaves, you know there are no more nails to bang into the pine box.
A few months ago they closed up the mall for good. What the new owners (they bought the whole she-bang for $2million) are going to do with it is anybody's guess. If you look at old plats of the property, you can see that before they covered it over, there was a substantial stream running through what was once a hilly woodland. There would be some justice in seeing it all demolished and the land being restored to something akin to its former rural state. Fat chance.
At any rate, I rolled by it and cruised through the parking lot taking some photos. It was sad, considering the nice memories I had of the place when it was alive and kicking. I think I did most of my Christmas shopping there for about fifteen years. Alas...