Back when I was 7-10 years old walking across the cat walk from the top of the parking garage, filled with pure excitement, to the dollar movies so many times with my dad, I never would have imagined I would be sitting at my home office is Dallas crying and watching these scenes over 20 years later. He passed away when I was 16 and the dollar movies was always one of our spots after he messed things up with my mom and they got divorced. Some times life just smacks you in the face man, I swear.
Hey bro miss you and the guys big time. It's Sam GHOSTrunna! Lol I came across this video when it came out and yes it's a very somber moment watching this. Such a great video. Me and my wife used to take our subway sandwiches and eat it on the boat on the 2nd level. It feels like it was just the other day and It's disheartening how fast this mall came to a warzone. Thank you for sharing your memory. Miss you bro and I hope all is well with you today. See ya bro.
I’m a local, born and raised in Corpus Christi, Texas! I’ve been here my entire life, and I just wanna say thank you for this video! It was so perfectly done from start to finish! I do have to say something though, sunrise was the go to mall for awhile, many people shopped there, the dollar cinema was the place to be, and kb toys, even the arcades that were there for awhile, but I agree, it did fall apart, and unfortunately it is what it is today! My mother worked at a store called Blaze for awhile and I enjoyed tagging along to hang out at sunrise the entire day! Oh, and thank you for the photos at the beginning of this video, I had never seen those! Thanks for making this video!!🙏🏼
I disagree, he talked crap about America. Malls are America. They are one of the backbones of America. If we lose them, we lose America. China will shut the supply chain down. Everyone who shops online will stave. He should know the subject. Research it.
I would say it was the cheaper mall which made it a big hit originally lol. I remember eating at the Wendy's right in front of the theaters. We would get our glasses there too before they eventually moved to their own building.
I remover seeing scream three back when you went to the movies now everything is in phone or I pad lab too you can stream live my vies times have changed you have Apple Music bug UA-cam be music way better
Grew up here as a kid and when I was younger my mom would bring my brother's and I here for lunch; she knew the lady who ran the chinese food spot in the food court and she'd always give us extra portions because she knew were struggling. I'll never forget what she did for us because it meant the world to us. After we ate, we would spend time in sears looking at the clearance items but we would never buy anything and just browse. I can't believe this place is in it's current state as it holds a very special place in my heart. If one day I become very wealthy I'd like to purchase the property and revive the mall. Until then, I'll continue watching videos like this so I can just get a visual to jog my memory and remind me of the moments of my childhood. Thank you for this video and showing us the mall in its current state.
@@DavidRodriguez-hg6kq I worked with you from 2016-2018 receiving team we use to censor all the shoes & you would talk about the Kandahar giant good to see your still doing good
@@wreckpreyna Are you still employed there? Yeah, I spoke about fringe topics like the Nephilim, UFOS, orbs, etc. Still do to whoever wants to listen, lol.
Looks like you made this video just in time because they are finally going to demolish it. Thank you for preseving this for those of us who grew up going here.
September 2024- Sunrise Mall is in the process of being torn down. A lot of memories in that mall. By the way, both malls you mentioned did pretty good for several years. Both malls had plenty of shops and plenty of people visiting. People had their favorite to visit.
This is such a shame, and so much damage in just 2 years. The 1st floor doors to the Burlington were open till 2021 and you could almost walk to the center court where they had put up a massive wall, and even then the damage was very minimal. Just minor water damage around the skylights and nothing more. This place looks like it was punched in the face since then. Thank you Anthony for taking the time to explore this location and dig up some great info and images from the past. It's that little bit extra that makes me enjoy your channel so much. I wouldn't be surprised if you need to take another trip down here to Texas in the next few years. Everyone's "favorite" mall owner recently purchased a mall here in San Antonio (Rolling Oaks) and it's unfortunately on a quick decline, a future dead mall in the making that will need to be explored.
I lived in San Antonio for 6 months and Rolling Oaks is truly our favorite mall. I love the fact that it still has those old school kid rides on the first floor that takes tokens. My boys loved going there. It also has the best Chinese food I ever tasted. I will be pretty heart broken if it closes down. The good thing is the owner does have events there that help bring the people in, I think they're trying their best.
I went in last year, and the vandalism wasn't even nowhere near this bad. The graffiti and shit wasn't even there last year. Things were more intact. That water wasn't there.
I live in Portland,Texas, about 7 miles from Corpus Christi, Texas. I used to come to this mall when it was really active. Sadly, the Sunrise Mall is halfway demolished by now, as I am currently leaving this comment. I don’t know what will take its place when it is all cleared away.
Another guy was in that mall 6 years ago and it was still in good shape the Billie Jean filming locations look exactly the same as in 1985. I am glad he did it because now is all gone.
I worked at this mall back in the late 90s, while in high school. At the chic fil a . Many times my friends and I would get something from the Wendy’s 99 cent menu and hit the dollar movies. Watching this video brings back a lot of memories..I can remember a lot of the stores that used to be there, the custodians and other mall employees I befriended. Sad to see Corpus neglected this place
There is just so many people who love and care for this mall and to see it like this breaks my heart. Too many good memories were made here.Corpus Christi please do something about this. The place holds too many memories for it to end like this😢
We used to call it the Zombie Mall because even 15 years ago it was almost always deserted. It’s a shame, we loved going to the movie theatre upstairs as a family.
I practically grew up in this mall during the 80's. I just recently learned that it had come to this. My first job was working at the H.E.B. right next to it.
Oh, that one hit me the hardest! I think it was only open on the weekends but you could walk around and see this huge model railroad with towns and bridges. I just assumed whoever owned it took it all with them when the mall closed down, but apparently not 😞
I found a video of it on YT. It was pretty cool. I’d go there when i was little and be there for hours watching the trains go by. 😢 ua-cam.com/video/4ffGuL0eNvg/v-deo.htmlsi=cJzUZbJvtRcGNM7a
One of the last times I was in that mall, about 8-10 years ago, it was pretty desolate and my mind kept flashing back to when I was a kid and how vibrant, colorful, neon, and full of people it used to be.
I was born and raised in Corpus, lived there till I graduated high school in 2014 still have alot of family that lives there. Watching this video brings back so many memories i have of Sunrise from when i was growing up in the early 2000s. I remember so many weekends at the dollar movies with my family because Tinseltown (AMC now) was too pricey for us. My dad, brother and I would sneak candy in while my mom got her nails done at the salon next door. I remember the large seating area designed to look like a ship in the center of the food court. Wendy's was our go to for a long time same with the Great American Cookies and Preztel World on the 1st floor. We used to love the arcade there, always wanted a birthday party there but never got a chance before they closed. And I'll never forget when I was maybe about 7 or 8 years old Burlington had a fashion show in the mall and me and my little brother walked the run way they set up in the center where the fountain and elevator are. They even filmed a short commercial for it that us and our parents were in, think they have a copy on VHS somewhere. Breaks my heart to see the condition it is in now, but thank you for reminding me of all the good times i had there.
Being local I knew it would be bad but I'm shocked. Especially the "electrical room" with the lake. 😮 I went here as a kid, playing by the fountains with my grandparents, birthdays at Aladdin's Castle, first date at the dollar movies lol. It was dead for decades before it actually closed. The last time I actually shopped there was probably 2005. Barely any stores even then & was already creepy to be in there. Unfortunately a mall walker was tragically killed in the mall in 2012.
The Dollar Cinema helped keep that place open into the 2000s, but by the time I saw my last movie there, the escalators and elevator were turned off, the only restaurant open was Orange Creations, and they had barriers keeping you out of the main mall.
This mall was my childhood hangout back in the 80s. Alladin's Castle, Dollar Cinema, Orange Creation's, and so much more. I remember them filming here for the movie The Legend of Billie Jean. In fact there was a scene that drove right by my street. The Sunrise Mall was the popular place to be back then. It is sad to see something go into such decay through a short period of time either because of weather or vandalism. I've talked to that Property Manager before and she is a really hard worker. I've always had an idea to try to get the owner to have a Paintball War inside this place but after looking at this video, I can see that that would be a very dangerous idea. Thank You Anthony for this. It brought back Memories!!!
Hey I was the one that you messaged asking how to get in. Great video! I know the mall is in bad shape but here is what I would have done with the property. Outside anchor stores are already being turned into gyms, a bar, Smoothie King and a storage unit. So I would think they don't want just a rotting swamp of a mess in the center of all of this. No need to have 2 malls across the street from each other so I would have turned the interior into offices for lease. Keeping what you can of the great 80s features for charm. They should have got a jump on this right as the mall closed to preserve what they have and fix the issues that needed to be taken care of.
My grandmother would take my brother and I to sunrise mall when we were little. I remember we would always make sure to get a pretzel at the pretzel stand every time before we would leave. She loved this mall more than La Palmera Mall because she said this mall was more comforting to her. When my grandmother passed away the sunrise mall closed down. I still see us sitting at the food court eating our pretzels and talking about what beanie she wanted to knit for me next. I love and miss you grandma.🤍🕊️
Having memories of sunrise mall at its height, this is truly shocking and very sad. I was 14 when I witnessed Peter Coyote deliver his big line during the elevator scene in Billie Jean. Sunrise mall was THE mall in corpus in the eighties. The other one was laughable at the time. La palmera mall has benefited greatly from sunrise’s fall
You're right. Too bad all the fresh, new stores are being built outside the old mall - Padre Staples Mall. There's not much room left there. Sunrise was a beautiful mall at first. Gangs ruined it. I'm shocked to see it look like this.
I remember that elevator s den too the guy who plays the bad guy he was believe it or not in the movie More American Graffiti UA-cam has it it’s worth it has many quotes Harrison Ford has a small part but anyway the bad guy in Billie Jean was Terry fields officer boss in more American graffiti when I herd his voice in the movie I knew it was him from Billie Jean
Very sorry for the very long message my family and I went to the food Cory they had lots of places you could eat the Chinese food was super good they had eye glasses store I think they had at one time was Waldron books store I know I was all in there didn’t in the 80 they have a audio cassette and vhs place
I was born and raised in Corpus Christi but moved to Austin in October 2000. I grew up hanging out with friends at sunrise mall in the mid 80's to early 90's. The condition of this place is not really shocking given how much the entire city has gone way downhill the last 10+ years.
Everything recently built in Corpus for it to grow has become a quick failure…schlitterbahn water park, the Outlet mall in Robstown, etc. The downtown area has very few eateries and crappy hotels.
I worked for a company out of CC, but i was based an hour outside of there. Always thought CC was very ghetto but talking to ppl who still work there they tell me it's gotten much worse in the past 10 years
I grew up in Corpus, no longer live there, heard Sunrise Mall finally closed, was almost nearly vacant for years, but I am shocked to see the state of the mall and how destroyed it is. I would go to Aladdin’s Castle as a kid and remember playing in the arcade, along to other stores there. Will always be part of my childhood memories. It is true Ace that the mall never got updated since it’s original design from the 80’s, made the mall so unique in that way.
I remember they had a rock and roll plus his name was noie they were a super real nice couple they let us look around my friend would get discounts then they had wrestling shirts tons of posters I hit an Evel Knievel poster from there
Does anyone know what happened to the family who once owned Rock and Roll plus are the family doing okay last I saw the man was in a wheel chair anytime went he always took time to talk with us they were a very nice kind down to earth couple if anyone e knows acres they see today please let them know Jesse and Jason love them very much they know who we are we were regular customers
Anthony, so many of your videos hit hard, but for some reason this one was a gut punch. I haven't been in a good place for a while, so that may explain my reaction to this. The Legend of Billie Jean is a blip in my movie memory, but this triggered emotions than Metrocenter closing despite what a big deal Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure was to me. I've never been to Texas, let alone Sunrise Mall, but for some reason I was crying at the end of the video as the melancholy music played and the montage of photos of the mall's past rolled on. Construction workers, mall employees, managers...so many hopes and dreams for the place and it's become a tragic shell of its former self. I dunno, maybe it spoke to me as more of a commentary on modern life. Malls are dying everywhere. Not so much due to online shopping, but nobody wants to go out and make shopping a social event anymore. Better to break glass and spray paint dicks everywhere I guess. I've been with you since your early Rolling Acres days (which is ironic because Sunrise is well on its way to becoming the next RA), and your work strikes a cord with me every time. Thank you.
I grew up going to that mall and had many memories going to the dollar movies, going to the arcade, roaming sears and their electronics area to play their demo games, getting gyros and so many other spots there... it hurts seeing that mall in it state right now. I still wondering who in the bright mind decided on building two malls next to each other.
@jdslyman Yes, Dixie Square I know they torn Down Dixie Square Mall about 11 years ago but I lived in Illinois all of my life and I didn't know it was abandoned until I seen Jonrev videos about it. That's the time I got into urban exploring through UA-cam here so I call myself a UA-cam Urban Explorer because I love to explore abandoned malls here on UA-cam and I seen many malls and I walked through many virtually here on UA-cam and Dixie Square was the most depressing and sadist mall I ever seen. ☹️🏢☹️🏢☹️🏢Yes, Dixie Square I know they torn Down Dixie Square Mall about 11 years ago but I lived in Illinois all of my life and I didn't know it was abandoned until I seen Jonrev videos about it. That's the time I got into urban exploring through UA-cam here so I call myself a UA-cam Urban Explorer because I love to explore abandoned malls here on UA-cam and I seen many malls and I walked through many virtually here on UA-cam and Dixie Square was the most depressing and sadist mall I ever seen. ☹️🏢☹️🏢☹️🏢
Hey there, I'm from and live in Corpus. Sunrise Mall was my favorite place to go when I was in High School. Sadly, it is being demolished. Have some great memories!!
@AcesAdventures1 I am originally from Corpus Christi. I grew up there and left when I was 21. I still own property there and still have close friends that grew up there too. Many memories of the mall. I wanted to bring sone stuff to your attention about the the question of why did they open this mall. Here's what I know and remember. Padre Staples Mall was the original mall right next door now known as La Palemera., it opened in 1970. The Sunrise Mall opened in 1981 and by that time Padre Staples Mall was considered old and it was already a place where people seemed to not want young people around. The shops were geared towards an older crowd and it definately relied on business patrons that would frequent Luby's Cafeteria, along with the big box retailers. They seemed to have no vision for the mall or intent on making it appealing to young people at all. So in 1981 Sunrise Mall seemed to be the more modern, more accommodating mall that had a modern food court new shops, including record stores and arcades along with what seemed like at least initially that the mall owners at the time were seeing the value in appealing to a younger crowd. The mall was a 30 million building project and as I recall, certain city officials had their hands in the cookie jar. They made money and so did their friends in construction. Sunrise Mall was a success for about 10 years despite big box retailers like Frost moving out. Frost went out of business and their end was the signal of the end of the era. By rhe time the Legend of Billie Jean was made the mall had become the place to be as far as malls were concerned. Padre Staples Mall hung in there and seemed as though it was going to close as businesses left that place. By the late eighties things changed at Sunrise Mall. The once teen friendly place known for arcades and pizza, the place where teens and young adults would come to hang out was becoming the old person mall too. A city council member named Leo Guerrero was involved with mall management as I recall. He was instrumental in running young people out of that mall. I remember going to that mall in my younger years and spending the day at the arcade grabbing some pizza and meeting up with friends to plan the rest of our day. By the late eighties punk was a thing in Corpus and the hardcore punk scene was thriving. Kids were putting on punk shows and punk kids were coming to the mall to hang out and pass out flyers for punk shows happening around town at rental halls and peoples back yards. Leo began a campaign against us as teens and young adults would be ultimately run out of the mall if you were just hanging out. Security would hassle us and they had a keep moving rule. Anyway, I went from welcomed there to getting chased away by mall security in a short 10 year period. This is where Padre Staples began to turn itself around so by the nineties Sunrise Mall was dying and Padre was reinventing itself. By the 2000s it was clear the Padre Staples was back and Sunrise was throughout the early 2000s struggling as the mall culture just died on the vine. Padre turned into Las Palmeras and still remains largely intact with only a few additions. Sad to see the slow destruction of Sunrise Mall but as you pointed out it was never meant to be. Putting malls right next to each other was a bad idea. It created a horrible traffic situation there and one mall would eventually die. Rip Sunrise. Thanks for the video. I found it haunting and it gave me a good dose of nostalgia.
You are right. Padre was for the older people and Sunrise was where the younger generation went. Graduated Richard King in 91. Used to get pizza at the food court for lunch, walked from King HS. Had a lot of good times at the movies there.
Man, this mall is my childhood. Now I'm an '07 baby so I'm young, but I have so many memories there. La Palmera mall has always been like it's cooler, older brother.
I use to live in Corpus late 90s early 2000s. This mall was dying way back then, however I always preferred this mall over the next door Staples Mall. It definitely had more of an 80s vibe. Always remembered the scenes from the cult classic the Legend of Billie Jean. It's sickening to see how detrimental people destroyed this place! Only hope for it now is to be bull dozed down, really sad to see this.
In 2016 my son and I used to just walk around this place. There were maybe 2 stores in existence then, and a train hobby store as well. My sons lived playing on the elevator that was still in service then.
love to old school tile and fountains , reminds me of the malls here before they were renovated , sucks that place is so trashed now and closed would be awesome to see those fountains still working and that place filled with shoppers like back in the day .....RIP Sunrise Mall
So very sad to see it go. I know this sounds funny but I imagine Selena going here as she lived in Corpus for so many years, I adore Corus and am very sad to see another mall go away, for us 80's and 90's kids it's like a part of our childhood vanishing.
Thanks for exploring, I have so many childhood memories in this place! So sad to see it in such bad shape, although I’m not surprised. I guess there is no hope for the renovation of this place.
Local here. Burlington and the gyms were the last stores to remain open here. Miss this mall so much. $1 movies too by the food court was the best. 😢 never knew a movie was filmed here either.
Born and raised Corpus Christi local here. This mall was already dying by the time I was born, but I think that's why it holds such a warm place in my memories. My earliest memories are of a few years before they cut the lights. There were people, but a lot fewer than would be at the other mall. The indoor fountain was starting to look rough, but to 2nd grade me, the water was crystal clear and smelled good (turns out I like the smell of chlorine water). Once the lights were out, there were fewer and fewer people. Eventually they closed the mall-side doors to one of the remaining anchors, and I realized that this mall was finally running out of steam. I actually hadn't known it was closed for good. I figured it closed up when lockdown happened (which started waaaaay too late but i digress) but I sort of hoped I survived and was still limping along on the dollar theater somehow. I think it being in that state of slow, long death made it easier to love because it contrasted so much with the surviving mall. Only having natural light made it look so much more open than La Palmera. The lack of traffic made it feel so much more intimate, more secret. The fountain was dry, but the tiles still showed a beautiful turquoise in between the dirt. I wish everyone could have seen the fountain I remember, full of shining pennies.
Oh, The TILES and NEON and that beautiful courtyard w the waterfall, fountain, and greenery !!! I worked @ Frost Bros Christmas 85 Season.. it was just before the decline in the late 80s !
This is so sad to see the state of this mall. I used to visit Corpus when I was a kid and finally went back four years ago. The city in general has gone down hill in the past 30 years.
There are so many bad elements in Corpus now, watching the news and hearing of shootings, stabbings and thefts is the norm. It’s really sad. I remember my son playing video games at Sears and on the exercise equipment the had for people to try them out and my husband carried on a conversation with Emmitt Smith one Saturday when he was a rookie. Mervyn’s was the best place to get school clothes. Montgomery Wards was the best place for baby stuff. Countless hours were spent in the arcade and even more hours at the Cinemark. I still have some of the drink holders and glow in the dark popcorn buckets from the late 80’s and early 90’s. Chelsea’s was fantastic, we frequented there. Good food and good shows at night. It’s sad to see the destruction of the mall from the criminals and all that graffiti now. I don’t understand how people can be this disrespectful for other people’s property. I hope someone has shut off the water. The way the idiots, for lack of better word here, have smashed it up. The whole place is going to have to be torn down. No one will spend the amount of money it will require to repair the damage that’s been done by said idiots. The water damage alone was a devastating blow to the structure of the building. So sad.
I don't often visit Corpus Christi but we usually go by the area where I can see the battleship museum from nearby, it looks pretty lonely for a city, hearing about what yall said about shootings, thefts, and stabbings has made me wonder how i haven't seen any of it when visiting
@@atdoomination4515I have lived here my whole life and have never seen anything like that lol, maybe on the news but even then, per capita there is not much crime. And it is typically isolated to the bad sides of town which every city has
This mall started to go downhill in the early 90’s and I mean immediately fast! I left in 1988 and the mall was still all the rage. I came back to visit in ‘90-91 and there were cops swarming everywhere. I had asked my mother what the reason was behind all of that and she began to tell me how gangs had infiltrated the mall and found a hang out to run out the public. People were being mugged, harassed and robbed. The problem wasn’t the fact they couldn’t keep stores… the major concerns were safety. People stopped shopping there. The decline was quickly. The city sat and did nothing like usual. Take at look at the old courthouse to understand what I mean by this. The Aladdin’s castle you see is not the original. It was moved from the bottom which was the opening on the left from the planet fitness. I’m flabbergasted to see this place has become what it is now. I am sad the city has let it come to this. I’d much rather see it demolished. I’d walk here by myself down a Main Street with my coins in hand to play games at diamond Jim’s .. I got my ears pierced here by my sister who worked at piercing pagoda (I was 10)… I shared a corn dog with my sister at the corn dog 7 (the store you bent down in to enter)when I was 6 (1980) my first time ever being in a mall. I remember going to the movies with a friend and telling her I’d be ok because I lived close by and I could call my mom… little did I know the phone would eat my quarter and I was scared to death what to do because it was at night and didn’t know I had someone concerned about my safety who lent me a quarter to call home lol, only to get in trouble because I hugged him for caring lol! I remember thinking I couldn’t wait to get older to be able to see comedy shows at Chelseas street pub (the store with the Union Jack 🇬🇧 on the wall, I did attend one show before they closed). We had friends who appeared in the movie as extras… and yet no one seamed to care what this building meant to the community
at 7:27, there's a business on the right where I took weekly music lessons. I regret not taking more time to walk around the mall when I had the chance. I remember my music instructor let me play my new amp after hours on the second floor in the area shown at 8:38 and he let me turn my amp as loud as I could. Still a fond memory.
I took karate lessons upstairs i guess around 08-10, there was a store upstairs that sold nunchucks too lol had a couple high school dates at the dollar theater , played mini golf in there with a friend, got weird leftover 90s shorts from burlington, rented a suit for (both) my high school proms there, and bought halloween masks from rock n roll plus... good times...
Sunrise Mall was not built right after the Padre Staples (La Palmera) Mall. Padre Staples was in operation for many years before Sunrise came into play. It was, however, a very small mall. When Sunrise opened it was double the size of Padre Staples, and ushered in some fashionable staples of the 80's. Because of it's newness, and larger variety, it drew many more customers. It also featured some amenities that made it more "hip", such as rooftop parking, a cascading fountain by the escalators, and another fountain at one end. It's operation and growth, however, came at a mixed time for the economy of Corpus. The oil industry, a main industry at the time, hit a bump and the local economy took some hits. To remain viable, and competitive, Padre Staples quickly expanded to an even larger footprint than Sunrise, and pulled back many shoppers. The interest in mall shopping was waning a bit, though this would be a slower decline overall. By the late 80's Sunrise had already lost it's "hipness", and was showing wear and tear (the rooftop parking did not last but a few years), and the fountains had issues periodically. With the large expansion of Padre Staples, additional growth in strip malls on the other side of S.P.I.D. (South Padre Island Drive) and between the malls, and the financial fallout from big box store decline Sunrise soon lost most of its foot traffic. Though in truth, Corpus was never a large enough city for two malls, especially one block apart. Sunrise tried to stay alive by leasing its space to businesses and private colleges, but it could never develop a long term sustainable strategy. Too many forces were pulling against it. Though the market continued to prove troublesome for Padre Staples, around the turn of the century they sold out to investors who felt they could reinvigorate the mall for continued life. Rather than a focus on internal structure, they rebuilt sections of Padre Staples to focus on external operations with open air restaurants (or a portion being outside) and other "outside" businesses. As a rebrand they also dropped the old name Padre Staples and rebranded as La Palmera, which would better resonate with the large Hispanic culture. As the economy changed, no longer relying primarily on oil and gas, but expanding to other industries (including an ever expanding port operation), Corpus has better weathered economic changes, including it's old, but ever adapting mall. For all of its failure, I still remember fondly those Friday nights at the dollar theater with friends, and the admitted excitement of having a "big" mall with "modern" features.
i remember when this mall was built , corpus sure has changed from the city it was in 70's and 80's . hell my old high school dont even look like it did then its a freaking collage or something now or something. and everything is growing outward old brownsville road always felt like nowhere as the city kinda thinned out about there . and all the back roads that went nowhere now have housing on them just nuts
As a 17 year old who lives here. I’ve only been in this mall for the 1 dollar movies when that was a thing still, never knew anything else about sunrise mall, didn’t even know there was movie made in it
I was born in Corpus in 2006, and most of my early memories in a declining Sunrise Mall was going to the dollar movies with my dad and mom. I think we walked around where you could walk around a couple times, but i was pretty young still. My dad on the other hand who was born in Corpus during the mid 60s got to experience Sunrise from the start. I forget which mall he said he worked at exactly, but I believe it was Sunrise mall. He used to work at a store called the Poster Gallery and even became the manager there after a while. I think he spent a good decade working there through most of the 90s and i think into the early 2000s before i was born. Theres even a picture of him and my mom when they started dating in the mid 90s of them in that store. He said that as a kid his grandmother would take him and his friends to the mall when she went to the Sears there to shop. they would split off and go hang out at the Aladdin's Palace and other stores and arcades in there. He had a lot of great memories in that mall since he got to experience it when it was first built. I remember when they introduced the Starcourt mall into stranger things, he said that mall in the show reminded him of Sunrise Mall in the 80s. I dont live in Corpus anymore, as I moved to my moms hometown when I was young. But this just gave me a nostalgia trip. Not of the mall itself since i barely got to experience much of it. But of my memories growing up in Corpus, because I loved living in a town on the bay. Going to baseball and hockey games with my dad. or my mom taking me on drives to the docks downtown and walking around looking at all the different boats. with me occasionally chasing seagulls on the docks. People say the town got worse in recent years, but that doesnt change a single thing about how i feel about my hometown. Thank you for making this video, it means a lot to me and hopefully my dad when I show it to him
Checked this mall out in 2014 while visiting my brother who was going to TAMUCC at the time. The mall was already pretty empty at that point. I actually have a picture of that Aladins castle in it's former glory.
Subscribed for awhile, after watching a couple of your videos. This is easily top five of your most signature videos. The average UA-camr would not have walked out of here for sure. One of the most dangerous conditions I've ever seen on any abandoned mall videos. Live wires touching standing water. The level of vulgar graffiti is off the charts; even in the tabletop dust. One of those storage areas, midway through, gave the vibe of a zombie horror movie, where I thought, "Don't turn your back!," before it cut. Truly heartbreaking to see what has become of this & other malls. Much respect for your navigation of the hazards and appreciation to you for these uploads.
Great segment, as always! For me, it's so amazing when you're able to find that archival footage when the mall was still alive in the 70s and beyond. So wonderfully nostalgic. Thanks, Ace!
I was born in corpus Christi but lived in Taft all my life.. This was one of the biggest places to go if we were lucky enough to head that way. My uncle Carlos May his soul rest in peace actually took me here for my 12th birthday... I ended up eating a lot of dots ice cream cotton candy flavor and Even got my very first dancing Barbie pop doll. It was one of the most magical days of my life. Rip tio Carlos thanks for the good times tio~🪷
Man and to think I helped paint and texture the ceiling it was an awesome place to have worked and helped build this once beautiful place it still holds a very special place in my heart thank you ace
In 1991, I worked at the Dollar Cinema. My first paycheck was about $150.00. My brother and I went to the mall looking to spend every penny. I had shopping bags full of merch from two to three shops and more cash burning through my pocket, and security as per the mall's policy kicked us out for being teenagers unescorted by an adult, and I was employed at the mall at the time! The mall started imposing a dress code upon its patrons. No ball caps for example. They started regulating where teens could gather and wait for their rides. They pretty much said, "teens are not welcome," and that was that for Sunrise Mall.
Because, at the beginning of the first Gulf War, there was a riot in the mall. Teens came by the carloads during their lunch hour. Running through the mall, running up and down the escalators. I work at the Cookie Co. and the store would shake from folks running on the second level. Security and PD began herding folks out the doors; stores closed (I wouldn't serve anyone), it took hours to regain control.
Being here for roughly 3 decades, this is wonderfully edited. The architecture, the nostalgia, especially the arcade and dollar theater. This was a dream spot for childhood memories. The water being seen going down the stairs/elevator. That and the merry go round at the old mall if folks recall! It's interesting how fast society turns into another phase to adapt to, leaving beautiful places like Sunrise Mall to decay from the inside out.
I've lived here and grew up here my entire life. This brought back so many memories of always going to the movies and the arcade with my family. These good times will forever stick in my heart. Great Video!
Thank you for creating the vid, it keeps the spark going🔥. I was born and raised in Corpus Christi.. 84’. There was no comparison which mall was the mall to be at in the early 90s. Padre was considered old peoples mall. Dollar Cinema on the weekends was no joke, the food court and right outside the entrance to the cinema was always packed with people. The small arcade in the cinema was lame, but we still played a few games. This mall was always packed and seemed real fun and everything was an adventure for me at that time. Later in its years I remember when Oshmans was added. The mini basketball court was ok. Walking throughout the mall, just hanging out with my dad and sister, or cousins was the best times. At the corner of the mall there was a small Mexican restaurant that was known for its nachos. This restaurant had a second story which is where I always asked the fam to eat so I could look down to the 1st story. Orange Julius was a favorite of me and my dad. Outside of the mall in the parking lot there used to be events, such as the streetball tournament, Bayball Ballyhoop, with I watched a few times. I had the luck of being able to get dropped off a few times at a place that I have tried to research but have found little to nothing on. This was a kids day care type place where you could be dropped off while your mom shops. This was not a normal daycare. This place had a big ball pit in the center, a water pit with bumper boats jungle-alligator themed & sounds, 2 big jumping houses that were set atop a wooden crawl maze that was dark but, had strobe lights flashing throughout with music. In the back of the place there was a move room with movie seating and a movie screen. There were arcade games scattered around the ball pit that was in the center. The game I remember was Conan. You could also order snacks and food from the back area like a real theater.
I loved 4 blocks from this mall. It was built as the other mail, PadreStaples Mall was going down hill. So everyone went to the “new” mall, Sunrise. It was great, it was closer to my house and all the cool kids went there. About 5 years later they built the Burlington strip mall and then started refocusing on Padre Staples mall, so then stores moved from the new mall back to the “new” La Palmera (padre staples mall).
I remember the dollar movie theater and also my cousin had 2 stores in the mall rock n roll and military surplus store in the mall I also remember sitting on Santa claus lap as a child in the mall
I used to go to Sunrise Mall allot through out history from my childhood and it brings me allot of memories since when I was a kid, teenager and adult shopping around with my family and I used to go the Dollar Cinema several times watching a movies allot but my last movie that I went to see Ghostbusters back in 2016 that I was all by myself at the theater alone and I didn't had a date and I don't even exist... but I'm really gonna miss Dollar Cinema so much and it was my favorite movie theater.
FYI. The demolition has begun on Sunrise Mall. Purchased and tearing it down to build hotels and restaurants. Enjoyed your video and thought you might like to know.
Awwww....thank you for documenting this...bittersweet to see, I gotta tell ya. Guess I enjoyed this mall at its best because I have great memories shopping there and seeing special seasonal displays. Wow...what a loss...my parents walked this mall in their later years...sigh...
Oh my gosh this was so nice and so fun! I wish you could have gone in every store. I recognized a lot of places and finally saw back rooms and corridors I hadn't before. Love your work. You did her justice.
Thank you for the tour of this dead mall. Very interesting, but as always. very depressing. Hate to see these once grand malls falling apart like this.
I met the caretaker about 5 years ago. She was selling off some of the old store fixtures and I was able to get some of them. I walked all the back hallways and it is such a disappointment the damage people will do for no reason
When I was there, I could not believe the water break, her son was literally in a full force water spray in his face fixing a sprinkler leak, it was wild.....
I'm from Brussels, Belgium, and the biggest mall will be closing part of it's shopping zrea, sp sad to see this, so it is all over the world ! Greetings Tom Belgium.
I’m another former kid from Corpus. Sunrise was THE place to be for LESS than 10 years out of 45 years ! Have you seen the movie yet ! It definitely showed the best shots along Ocean Drive and the waterfall section w all the greenery !!!!!
My mom used to own a flower shop that was located under the escalators called Flowerama. I grew up running around that place from the time I was a baby until probably first or second grade. They always knew where to find me. At the toy store. Kids these days wouldn’t even know what a toy store is. ~John
Who remembers KB toys?
I miss the dollar movies , was always there on the weekend as a teenager sneaking in different movies and getting free popcorn 🍿.. good timess
Indeed
@@AcesAdventures1 you from corpus christi too??
@AcesAdventures1 When did you go there and record it? Could imagine how hot it be inside the building.
Back when I was 7-10 years old walking across the cat walk from the top of the parking garage, filled with pure excitement, to the dollar movies so many times with my dad, I never would have imagined I would be sitting at my home office is Dallas crying and watching these scenes over 20 years later. He passed away when I was 16 and the dollar movies was always one of our spots after he messed things up with my mom and they got divorced. Some times life just smacks you in the face man, I swear.
Hey bro miss you and the guys big time. It's Sam GHOSTrunna! Lol I came across this video when it came out and yes it's a very somber moment watching this. Such a great video. Me and my wife used to take our subway sandwiches and eat it on the boat on the 2nd level. It feels like it was just the other day and It's disheartening how fast this mall came to a warzone. Thank you for sharing your memory. Miss you bro and I hope all is well with you today. See ya bro.
@@SamseaGonzales Samuel Gompers! lol was wondering if someone would recognize my response. Amazing video. Hope all is well bro!
09😅@@SamseaGonzales
I’m a local, born and raised in Corpus Christi, Texas! I’ve been here my entire life, and I just wanna say thank you for this video! It was so perfectly done from start to finish! I do have to say something though, sunrise was the go to mall for awhile, many people shopped there, the dollar cinema was the place to be, and kb toys, even the arcades that were there for awhile, but I agree, it did fall apart, and unfortunately it is what it is today! My mother worked at a store called Blaze for awhile and I enjoyed tagging along to hang out at sunrise the entire day! Oh, and thank you for the photos at the beginning of this video, I had never seen those! Thanks for making this video!!🙏🏼
I disagree, he talked crap about America. Malls are America. They are one of the backbones of America. If we lose them, we lose America. China will shut the supply chain down. Everyone who shops online will stave. He should know the subject. Research it.
The Dollar cinema was the last place open there that still had people going there and my goodness I miss it😢 their popcorns hit different too 😋
@@rafaelmarquez8886 same here!!
I would say it was the cheaper mall which made it a big hit originally lol. I remember eating at the Wendy's right in front of the theaters. We would get our glasses there too before they eventually moved to their own building.
I remover seeing scream three back when you went to the movies now everything is in phone or I pad lab too you can stream live my vies times have changed you have Apple Music bug UA-cam be music way better
Grew up here as a kid and when I was younger my mom would bring my brother's and I here for lunch; she knew the lady who ran the chinese food spot in the food court and she'd always give us extra portions because she knew were struggling. I'll never forget what she did for us because it meant the world to us. After we ate, we would spend time in sears looking at the clearance items but we would never buy anything and just browse. I can't believe this place is in it's current state as it holds a very special place in my heart. If one day I become very wealthy I'd like to purchase the property and revive the mall. Until then, I'll continue watching videos like this so I can just get a visual to jog my memory and remind me of the moments of my childhood. Thank you for this video and showing us the mall in its current state.
Oh wow! I wonder if the mall will stay like this or it will become something else?
@@DylanW-z3o Sadly the mall is being demolished at the time of writing this it is halfway done. I do not know exactly what will happen to this place.
Just got this in my recommended. Any fellow CC Texans?
I worked at Burlington from 1992 to 2018, I remember taking my lunch break at the food court and going with my wife to the Dollar Cinema.
@@DavidRodriguez-hg6kq I worked with you from 2016-2018 receiving team we use to censor all the shoes & you would talk about the Kandahar giant good to see your still doing good
@@wreckpreyna Are you still employed there? Yeah, I spoke about fringe topics like the Nephilim, UFOS, orbs, etc. Still do to whoever wants to listen, lol.
Yup. I miss this mall 🫤
Corpus Christi is trash
Just turned 45 this year and I can still smell this mall from my childhood! RIP Sunrise Mall!
Looks like you made this video just in time because they are finally going to demolish it. Thank you for preseving this for those of us who grew up going here.
September 2024- Sunrise Mall is in the process of being torn down. A lot of memories in that mall.
By the way, both malls you mentioned did pretty good for several years. Both malls had plenty of shops and plenty of people visiting. People had their favorite to visit.
This is such a shame, and so much damage in just 2 years. The 1st floor doors to the Burlington were open till 2021 and you could almost walk to the center court where they had put up a massive wall, and even then the damage was very minimal. Just minor water damage around the skylights and nothing more. This place looks like it was punched in the face since then. Thank you Anthony for taking the time to explore this location and dig up some great info and images from the past. It's that little bit extra that makes me enjoy your channel so much. I wouldn't be surprised if you need to take another trip down here to Texas in the next few years. Everyone's "favorite" mall owner recently purchased a mall here in San Antonio (Rolling Oaks) and it's unfortunately on a quick decline, a future dead mall in the making that will need to be explored.
I lived in San Antonio for 6 months and Rolling Oaks is truly our favorite mall. I love the fact that it still has those old school kid rides on the first floor that takes tokens. My boys loved going there. It also has the best Chinese food I ever tasted. I will be pretty heart broken if it closes down. The good thing is the owner does have events there that help bring the people in, I think they're trying their best.
I went in last year, and the vandalism wasn't even nowhere near this bad. The graffiti and shit wasn't even there last year. Things were more intact. That water wasn't there.
@jdslyman it's owned by Kohan now and boooooy is it falling apart quickly. 😢
Live near rolllingnoals now amd grew up in and out of CC in the 70s 80s and 90s living there a couple of times. Brings back lots of memories.
Almost all the malls in San Antonio are on a downward spiral except Northstar Mall. Rolling Oaks has been in decline for a couple of decades now.
I’m local to Sunrise Mall, I knew it was in bad shape but not this bad. Made a lot of memories there as a teenager.
I've seen photos on Facebook. It's bad, really bad.
It’s always so sad when it’s someone’s memory . 😢 sorry for this loss.
I live in Portland,Texas, about 7 miles from Corpus Christi, Texas. I used to come to this mall when it was really active. Sadly, the Sunrise Mall is halfway demolished by now, as I am currently leaving this comment. I don’t know what will take its place when it is all cleared away.
Another guy was in that mall 6 years ago and it was still in good shape the Billie Jean filming locations look exactly the same as in 1985. I am glad he did it because now is all gone.
I worked at this mall back in the late 90s, while in high school. At the chic fil a . Many times my friends and I would get something from the Wendy’s 99 cent menu and hit the dollar movies. Watching this video brings back a lot of memories..I can remember a lot of the stores that used to be there, the custodians and other mall employees I befriended. Sad to see Corpus neglected this place
Dude remember that ice cream place across from the movies
They made badass banana splits😂
There is just so many people who love and care for this mall and to see it like this breaks my heart. Too many good memories were made here.Corpus Christi please do something about this. The place holds too many memories for it to end like this😢
I still think that was the best Chic-Fil-A
We used to call it the Zombie Mall because even 15 years ago it was almost always deserted. It’s a shame, we loved going to the movie theatre upstairs as a family.
So sad…before Covid, it was in decent shape. They even had the fountains running. Can’t believe it got to this
Urbex kids
@@AcesAdventures1 how did you get permission? Is it easy?
@@AcesAdventures1not all urbex kids destroy it truly makes me sad in this condition
I practically grew up in this mall during the 80's. I just recently learned that it had come to this. My first job was working at the H.E.B. right next to it.
Seeing the model railroad was extra depressing. You can imagine the time, effort and energy that goes into building these on a grand scale.
Oh, that one hit me the hardest! I think it was only open on the weekends but you could walk around and see this huge model railroad with towns and bridges. I just assumed whoever owned it took it all with them when the mall closed down, but apparently not 😞
I used to go in there every time I went to sunrise mall
I found a video of it on YT. It was pretty cool. I’d go there when i was little and be there for hours watching the trains go by. 😢 ua-cam.com/video/4ffGuL0eNvg/v-deo.htmlsi=cJzUZbJvtRcGNM7a
One of the last times I was in that mall, about 8-10 years ago, it was pretty desolate and my mind kept flashing back to when I was a kid and how vibrant, colorful, neon, and full of people it used to be.
I was born and raised in Corpus, lived there till I graduated high school in 2014 still have alot of family that lives there. Watching this video brings back so many memories i have of Sunrise from when i was growing up in the early 2000s. I remember so many weekends at the dollar movies with my family because Tinseltown (AMC now) was too pricey for us. My dad, brother and I would sneak candy in while my mom got her nails done at the salon next door. I remember the large seating area designed to look like a ship in the center of the food court. Wendy's was our go to for a long time same with the Great American Cookies and Preztel World on the 1st floor. We used to love the arcade there, always wanted a birthday party there but never got a chance before they closed. And I'll never forget when I was maybe about 7 or 8 years old Burlington had a fashion show in the mall and me and my little brother walked the run way they set up in the center where the fountain and elevator are. They even filmed a short commercial for it that us and our parents were in, think they have a copy on VHS somewhere. Breaks my heart to see the condition it is in now, but thank you for reminding me of all the good times i had there.
Being local I knew it would be bad but I'm shocked. Especially the "electrical room" with the lake. 😮 I went here as a kid, playing by the fountains with my grandparents, birthdays at Aladdin's Castle, first date at the dollar movies lol. It was dead for decades before it actually closed. The last time I actually shopped there was probably 2005. Barely any stores even then & was already creepy to be in there. Unfortunately a mall walker was tragically killed in the mall in 2012.
I always remembered those areas too. I’m originally from Rockport
The Dollar Cinema helped keep that place open into the 2000s, but by the time I saw my last movie there, the escalators and elevator were turned off, the only restaurant open was Orange Creations, and they had barriers keeping you out of the main mall.
This mall was my childhood hangout back in the 80s. Alladin's Castle, Dollar Cinema, Orange Creation's, and so much more. I remember them filming here for the movie The Legend of Billie Jean. In fact there was a scene that drove right by my street. The Sunrise Mall was the popular place to be back then. It is sad to see something go into such decay through a short period of time either because of weather or vandalism. I've talked to that Property Manager before and she is a really hard worker. I've always had an idea to try to get the owner to have a Paintball War inside this place but after looking at this video, I can see that that would be a very dangerous idea. Thank You Anthony for this. It brought back Memories!!!
Hey I was the one that you messaged asking how to get in. Great video! I know the mall is in bad shape but here is what I would have done with the property. Outside anchor stores are already being turned into gyms, a bar, Smoothie King and a storage unit. So I would think they don't want just a rotting swamp of a mess in the center of all of this. No need to have 2 malls across the street from each other so I would have turned the interior into offices for lease. Keeping what you can of the great 80s features for charm. They should have got a jump on this right as the mall closed to preserve what they have and fix the issues that needed to be taken care of.
My grandmother would take my brother and I to sunrise mall when we were little. I remember we would always make sure to get a pretzel at the pretzel stand every time before we would leave. She loved this mall more than La Palmera Mall because she said this mall was more comforting to her. When my grandmother passed away the sunrise mall closed down. I still see us sitting at the food court eating our pretzels and talking about what beanie she wanted to knit for me next. I love and miss you grandma.🤍🕊️
Having memories of sunrise mall at its height, this is truly shocking and very sad. I was 14 when I witnessed Peter Coyote deliver his big line during the elevator scene in Billie Jean. Sunrise mall was THE mall in corpus in the eighties. The other one was laughable at the time. La palmera mall has benefited greatly from sunrise’s fall
You're right. Too bad all the fresh, new stores are being built outside the old mall - Padre Staples Mall. There's not much room left there. Sunrise was a beautiful mall at first. Gangs ruined it. I'm shocked to see it look like this.
My mom was at the beach when they were filming the beach scene
I remember that elevator s den too the guy who plays the bad guy he was believe it or not in the movie More American Graffiti UA-cam has it it’s worth it has many quotes Harrison Ford has a small part but anyway the bad guy in Billie Jean was Terry fields officer boss in more American graffiti when I herd his voice in the movie I knew it was him from Billie Jean
Very sorry for the very long message my family and I went to the food Cory they had lots of places you could eat the Chinese food was super good they had eye glasses store I think they had at one time was Waldron books store I know I was all in there didn’t in the 80 they have a audio cassette and vhs place
I used to go to tide dentel as a kid closed down during covid I think I loved walking around sun rise mall some stores were still opened not many.
I was born and raised in Corpus Christi but moved to Austin in October 2000. I grew up hanging out with friends at sunrise mall in the mid 80's to early 90's. The condition of this place is not really shocking given how much the entire city has gone way downhill the last 10+ years.
I moved out of CC, too. Boring city so I went to L.A. & had a blast. (Before L.A. went to ruins, too) CC isn't so "Sparkling".
Everything recently built in Corpus for it to grow has become a quick failure…schlitterbahn water park, the Outlet mall in Robstown, etc. The downtown area has very few eateries and crappy hotels.
@@CTS55555 Yes, that's sad & embarrassing.
I worked for a company out of CC, but i was based an hour outside of there. Always thought CC was very ghetto but talking to ppl who still work there they tell me it's gotten much worse in the past 10 years
@@cesarnarro6013 way worse, I used to love it here, but now it almost makes me want to move.
I grew up in Corpus, no longer live there, heard Sunrise Mall finally closed, was almost nearly vacant for years, but I am shocked to see the state of the mall and how destroyed it is. I would go to Aladdin’s Castle as a kid and remember playing in the arcade, along to other stores there. Will always be part of my childhood memories.
It is true Ace that the mall never got updated since it’s original design from the 80’s, made the mall so unique in that way.
Anthony one of your very best productions! It's beyond sad to look at this! I feel for the devoted caretakers. Missed you good to see you back!
TY TY
@@AcesAdventures1 your welcome brother!
I remember they had a rock and roll plus his name was noie they were a super real nice couple they let us look around my friend would get discounts then they had wrestling shirts tons of posters I hit an Evel Knievel poster from there
Does anyone know what happened to the family who once owned Rock and Roll plus are the family doing okay last I saw the man was in a wheel chair anytime went he always took time to talk with us they were a very nice kind down to earth couple if anyone e knows acres they see today please let them know Jesse and Jason love them very much they know who we are we were regular customers
Anthony, so many of your videos hit hard, but for some reason this one was a gut punch. I haven't been in a good place for a while, so that may explain my reaction to this. The Legend of Billie Jean is a blip in my movie memory, but this triggered emotions than Metrocenter closing despite what a big deal Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure was to me. I've never been to Texas, let alone Sunrise Mall, but for some reason I was crying at the end of the video as the melancholy music played and the montage of photos of the mall's past rolled on. Construction workers, mall employees, managers...so many hopes and dreams for the place and it's become a tragic shell of its former self. I dunno, maybe it spoke to me as more of a commentary on modern life. Malls are dying everywhere. Not so much due to online shopping, but nobody wants to go out and make shopping a social event anymore. Better to break glass and spray paint dicks everywhere I guess. I've been with you since your early Rolling Acres days (which is ironic because Sunrise is well on its way to becoming the next RA), and your work strikes a cord with me every time. Thank you.
This mall was one of the best malls!!
Excellent video. It is very sad and erie inside of this mall yet intriguing. Thanks for filming.
Thanks for watching
Well presented Anthony. Its so sad to see such distruction after a structure closes. look forward to the next video
Ty ty :)
I grew up going to that mall and had many memories going to the dollar movies, going to the arcade, roaming sears and their electronics area to play their demo games, getting gyros and so many other spots there... it hurts seeing that mall in it state right now. I still wondering who in the bright mind decided on building two malls next to each other.
The interior space closed in 2019
It's been 4 years And it's already heading towards Rolling Acres Mall levels of Decay and Vandalism.
@jdslyman
Yes, Dixie Square I know they torn Down Dixie Square Mall about 11 years ago but I lived in Illinois all of my life and I didn't know it was abandoned until I seen Jonrev videos about it. That's the time I got into urban exploring through UA-cam here so I call myself a UA-cam Urban Explorer because I love to explore abandoned malls here on UA-cam and I seen many malls and I walked through many virtually here on UA-cam and Dixie Square was the most depressing and sadist mall I ever seen. ☹️🏢☹️🏢☹️🏢Yes, Dixie Square I know they torn Down Dixie Square Mall about 11 years ago but I lived in Illinois all of my life and I didn't know it was abandoned until I seen Jonrev videos about it. That's the time I got into urban exploring through UA-cam here so I call myself a UA-cam Urban Explorer because I love to explore abandoned malls here on UA-cam and I seen many malls and I walked through many virtually here on UA-cam and Dixie Square was the most depressing and sadist mall I ever seen. ☹️🏢☹️🏢☹️🏢
Hey there, I'm from and live in Corpus. Sunrise Mall was my favorite place to go when I was in High School. Sadly, it is being demolished. Have some great memories!!
I almost cried watching this. I grew up in the Bluff, and always went to Sunrise and Padre. So sad to see it like this.
I grew up in bluff also, and spent alot if time at sunrise mall, this is very sad
@AcesAdventures1 I am originally from Corpus Christi. I grew up there and left when I was 21. I still own property there and still have close friends that grew up there too. Many memories of the mall. I wanted to bring sone stuff to your attention about the the question of why did they open this mall.
Here's what I know and remember. Padre Staples Mall was the original mall right next door now known as La Palemera., it opened in 1970. The Sunrise Mall opened in 1981 and by that time Padre Staples Mall was considered old and it was already a place where people seemed to not want young people around. The shops were geared towards an older crowd and it definately relied on business patrons that would frequent Luby's Cafeteria, along with the big box retailers. They seemed to have no vision for the mall or intent on making it appealing to young people at all. So in 1981 Sunrise Mall seemed to be the more modern, more accommodating mall that had a modern food court new shops, including record stores and arcades along with what seemed like at least initially that the mall owners at the time were seeing the value in appealing to a younger crowd. The mall was a 30 million building project and as I recall, certain city officials had their hands in the cookie jar. They made money and so did their friends in construction.
Sunrise Mall was a success for about 10 years despite big box retailers like Frost moving out. Frost went out of business and their end was the signal of the end of the era. By rhe time the Legend of Billie Jean was made the mall had become the place to be as far as malls were concerned. Padre Staples Mall hung in there and seemed as though it was going to close as businesses left that place.
By the late eighties things changed at Sunrise Mall. The once teen friendly place known for arcades and pizza, the place where teens and young adults would come to hang out was becoming the old person mall too. A city council member named Leo Guerrero was involved with mall management as I recall. He was instrumental in running young people out of that mall. I remember going to that mall in my younger years and spending the day at the arcade grabbing some pizza and meeting up with friends to plan the rest of our day. By the late eighties punk was a thing in Corpus and the hardcore punk scene was thriving. Kids were putting on punk shows and punk kids were coming to the mall to hang out and pass out flyers for punk shows happening around town at rental halls and peoples back yards. Leo began a campaign against us as teens and young adults would be ultimately run out of the mall if you were just hanging out. Security would hassle us and they had a keep moving rule. Anyway, I went from welcomed there to getting chased away by mall security in a short 10 year period. This is where Padre Staples began to turn itself around so by the nineties Sunrise Mall was dying and Padre was reinventing itself. By the 2000s it was clear the Padre Staples was back and Sunrise was throughout the early 2000s struggling as the mall culture just died on the vine. Padre turned into Las Palmeras and still remains largely intact with only a few additions. Sad to see the slow destruction of Sunrise Mall but as you pointed out it was never meant to be. Putting malls right next to each other was a bad idea. It created a horrible traffic situation there and one mall would eventually die. Rip Sunrise. Thanks for the video. I found it haunting and it gave me a good dose of nostalgia.
Really appreciated your in depth history lesson thank you
You are right. Padre was for the older people and Sunrise was where the younger generation went. Graduated Richard King in 91. Used to get pizza at the food court for lunch, walked from King HS. Had a lot of good times at the movies there.
Remember having to AVOID SPID between Airline and Weber from Black Friday til after New Years !!!!!
I’m a RKHS too, Class of 80 !!!
I used to go to a nightclub in one of those malls when I went to Padre inthe summer, mid 80s. Any info on that? Name? Thanks.
Dead palm trees…and oh, my gosh-that lake. 😳
Great video!
Man, this mall is my childhood. Now I'm an '07 baby so I'm young, but I have so many memories there. La Palmera mall has always been like it's cooler, older brother.
One of the best UA-cam channels out
I use to live in Corpus late 90s early 2000s. This mall was dying way back then, however I always preferred this mall over the next door Staples Mall. It definitely had more of an 80s vibe. Always remembered the scenes from the cult classic the Legend of Billie Jean. It's sickening to see how detrimental people destroyed this place! Only hope for it now is to be bull dozed down, really sad to see this.
In 2016 my son and I used to just walk around this place. There were maybe 2 stores in existence then, and a train hobby store as well. My sons lived playing on the elevator that was still in service then.
Glad you finally got into this place. The mall bulding is pretty much beyond repair at this point, very sad.
love to old school tile and fountains , reminds me of the malls here before they were renovated , sucks that place is so trashed now and closed would be awesome to see those fountains still working and that place filled with shoppers like back in the day .....RIP Sunrise Mall
So very sad to see it go. I know this sounds funny but I imagine Selena going here as she lived in Corpus for so many years, I adore Corus and am very sad to see another mall go away, for us 80's and 90's kids it's like a part of our childhood vanishing.
I agree. Corpus just lets things "go" & doesn't care. They force downtown on everyone & I won't go there.
I used to sit in that security office every night. The bar across from the office was Chelsea's at the time, and they'd give me free food and drinks.
Everyone loved Chelseas Street Pub!
What year did you work there?
That sucks when they vandalize these places. Thanks for another nice video.
Yeah but you got to admit it makes it kind of spooky and foreboding to watch the video. If it was in good shape, it would be kind of boring.
Thanks for exploring, I have so many childhood memories in this place! So sad to see it in such bad shape, although I’m not surprised. I guess there is no hope for the renovation of this place.
Glad you enjoyed it
I was in the mall in 2015, and it was in decent condition. Even watched a movie at the dollar theater. Things must have gone down fast since.
Local here. Burlington and the gyms were the last stores to remain open here. Miss this mall so much. $1 movies too by the food court was the best. 😢 never knew a movie was filmed here either.
Born and raised Corpus Christi local here. This mall was already dying by the time I was born, but I think that's why it holds such a warm place in my memories.
My earliest memories are of a few years before they cut the lights. There were people, but a lot fewer than would be at the other mall. The indoor fountain was starting to look rough, but to 2nd grade me, the water was crystal clear and smelled good (turns out I like the smell of chlorine water).
Once the lights were out, there were fewer and fewer people. Eventually they closed the mall-side doors to one of the remaining anchors, and I realized that this mall was finally running out of steam.
I actually hadn't known it was closed for good. I figured it closed up when lockdown happened (which started waaaaay too late but i digress) but I sort of hoped I survived and was still limping along on the dollar theater somehow.
I think it being in that state of slow, long death made it easier to love because it contrasted so much with the surviving mall. Only having natural light made it look so much more open than La Palmera. The lack of traffic made it feel so much more intimate, more secret. The fountain was dry, but the tiles still showed a beautiful turquoise in between the dirt.
I wish everyone could have seen the fountain I remember, full of shining pennies.
Oh, The TILES and NEON and that beautiful courtyard w the waterfall, fountain, and greenery !!!
I worked @ Frost Bros Christmas 85 Season.. it was just before the decline in the late 80s !
Loved venturing out to the sunrise mall back when I was stationed in kingsville, which is pretty much a ghost town itself now….so sad 😢
This is so sad to see the state of this mall. I used to visit Corpus when I was a kid and finally went back four years ago. The city in general has gone down hill in the past 30 years.
Yes it has, still live here and can’t believe what this city has turned into to.
There are so many bad elements in Corpus now, watching the news and hearing of shootings, stabbings and thefts is the norm. It’s really sad. I remember my son playing video games at Sears and on the exercise equipment the had for people to try them out and my husband carried on a conversation with Emmitt Smith one Saturday when he was a rookie. Mervyn’s was the best place to get school clothes. Montgomery Wards was the best place for baby stuff. Countless hours were spent in the arcade and even more hours at the Cinemark. I still have some of the drink holders and glow in the dark popcorn buckets from the late 80’s and early 90’s. Chelsea’s was fantastic, we frequented there. Good food and good shows at night. It’s sad to see the destruction of the mall from the criminals and all that graffiti now. I don’t understand how people can be this disrespectful for other people’s property. I hope someone has shut off the water. The way the idiots, for lack of better word here, have smashed it up. The whole place is going to have to be torn down. No one will spend the amount of money it will require to repair the damage that’s been done by said idiots. The water damage alone was a devastating blow to the structure of the building. So sad.
I don't often visit Corpus Christi but we usually go by the area where I can see the battleship museum from nearby, it looks pretty lonely for a city, hearing about what yall said about shootings, thefts, and stabbings has made me wonder how i haven't seen any of it when visiting
@@atdoomination4515I have lived here my whole life and have never seen anything like that lol, maybe on the news but even then, per capita there is not much crime. And it is typically isolated to the bad sides of town which every city has
This mall started to go downhill in the early 90’s and I mean immediately fast! I left in 1988 and the mall was still all the rage. I came back to visit in ‘90-91 and there were cops swarming everywhere. I had asked my mother what the reason was behind all of that and she began to tell me how gangs had infiltrated the mall and found a hang out to run out the public. People were being mugged, harassed and robbed. The problem wasn’t the fact they couldn’t keep stores… the major concerns were safety. People stopped shopping there. The decline was quickly. The city sat and did nothing like usual. Take at look at the old courthouse to understand what I mean by this. The Aladdin’s castle you see is not the original. It was moved from the bottom which was the opening on the left from the planet fitness. I’m flabbergasted to see this place has become what it is now. I am sad the city has let it come to this. I’d much rather see it demolished. I’d walk here by myself down a Main Street with my coins in hand to play games at diamond Jim’s .. I got my ears pierced here by my sister who worked at piercing pagoda (I was 10)… I shared a corn dog with my sister at the corn dog 7 (the store you bent down in to enter)when I was 6 (1980) my first time ever being in a mall. I remember going to the movies with a friend and telling her I’d be ok because I lived close by and I could call my mom… little did I know the phone would eat my quarter and I was scared to death what to do because it was at night and didn’t know I had someone concerned about my safety who lent me a quarter to call home lol, only to get in trouble because I hugged him for caring lol! I remember thinking I couldn’t wait to get older to be able to see comedy shows at Chelseas street pub (the store with the Union Jack 🇬🇧 on the wall, I did attend one show before they closed). We had friends who appeared in the movie as extras… and yet no one seamed to care what this building meant to the community
at 7:27, there's a business on the right where I took weekly music lessons. I regret not taking more time to walk around the mall when I had the chance. I remember my music instructor let me play my new amp after hours on the second floor in the area shown at 8:38 and he let me turn my amp as loud as I could. Still a fond memory.
I took karate lessons upstairs i guess around 08-10, there was a store upstairs that sold nunchucks too lol had a couple high school dates at the dollar theater , played mini golf in there with a friend, got weird leftover 90s shorts from burlington, rented a suit for (both) my high school proms there, and bought halloween masks from rock n roll plus... good times...
Thank you for doing this. It’s coming down now
Sunrise Mall was not built right after the Padre Staples (La Palmera) Mall. Padre Staples was in operation for many years before Sunrise came into play. It was, however, a very small mall. When Sunrise opened it was double the size of Padre Staples, and ushered in some fashionable staples of the 80's. Because of it's newness, and larger variety, it drew many more customers. It also featured some amenities that made it more "hip", such as rooftop parking, a cascading fountain by the escalators, and another fountain at one end. It's operation and growth, however, came at a mixed time for the economy of Corpus. The oil industry, a main industry at the time, hit a bump and the local economy took some hits.
To remain viable, and competitive, Padre Staples quickly expanded to an even larger footprint than Sunrise, and pulled back many shoppers. The interest in mall shopping was waning a bit, though this would be a slower decline overall. By the late 80's Sunrise had already lost it's "hipness", and was showing wear and tear (the rooftop parking did not last but a few years), and the fountains had issues periodically. With the large expansion of Padre Staples, additional growth in strip malls on the other side of S.P.I.D. (South Padre Island Drive) and between the malls, and the financial fallout from big box store decline Sunrise soon lost most of its foot traffic. Though in truth, Corpus was never a large enough city for two malls, especially one block apart. Sunrise tried to stay alive by leasing its space to businesses and private colleges, but it could never develop a long term sustainable strategy. Too many forces were pulling against it.
Though the market continued to prove troublesome for Padre Staples, around the turn of the century they sold out to investors who felt they could reinvigorate the mall for continued life. Rather than a focus on internal structure, they rebuilt sections of Padre Staples to focus on external operations with open air restaurants (or a portion being outside) and other "outside" businesses. As a rebrand they also dropped the old name Padre Staples and rebranded as La Palmera, which would better resonate with the large Hispanic culture. As the economy changed, no longer relying primarily on oil and gas, but expanding to other industries (including an ever expanding port operation), Corpus has better weathered economic changes, including it's old, but ever adapting mall.
For all of its failure, I still remember fondly those Friday nights at the dollar theater with friends, and the admitted excitement of having a "big" mall with "modern" features.
i remember when this mall was built , corpus sure has changed from the city it was in 70's and 80's . hell my old high school dont even look like it did then its a freaking collage or something now or something. and everything is growing outward old brownsville road always felt like nowhere as the city kinda thinned out about there . and all the back roads that went nowhere now have housing on them just nuts
CC is growing wildly towards Yorktown. All brand new places but not enough people go there.
Thank You For Sharing this. It’s sad to see Malls going down.
As a 17 year old who lives here. I’ve only been in this mall for the 1 dollar movies when that was a thing still, never knew anything else about sunrise mall, didn’t even know there was movie made in it
I live near a Sunrise Mall that is dying, not this one nor the one in Massapequa. I guess it not a good time to have the name Sunrise Mall.
reflects the condition of your country , I grew up in the 80's and malls were a great time miss those days
This makes me so sad. A lot of good memories in this mall.
I was born in Corpus in 2006, and most of my early memories in a declining Sunrise Mall was going to the dollar movies with my dad and mom. I think we walked around where you could walk around a couple times, but i was pretty young still.
My dad on the other hand who was born in Corpus during the mid 60s got to experience Sunrise from the start. I forget which mall he said he worked at exactly, but I believe it was Sunrise mall. He used to work at a store called the Poster Gallery and even became the manager there after a while. I think he spent a good decade working there through most of the 90s and i think into the early 2000s before i was born. Theres even a picture of him and my mom when they started dating in the mid 90s of them in that store.
He said that as a kid his grandmother would take him and his friends to the mall when she went to the Sears there to shop. they would split off and go hang out at the Aladdin's Palace and other stores and arcades in there. He had a lot of great memories in that mall since he got to experience it when it was first built. I remember when they introduced the Starcourt mall into stranger things, he said that mall in the show reminded him of Sunrise Mall in the 80s.
I dont live in Corpus anymore, as I moved to my moms hometown when I was young. But this just gave me a nostalgia trip. Not of the mall itself since i barely got to experience much of it. But of my memories growing up in Corpus, because I loved living in a town on the bay. Going to baseball and hockey games with my dad. or my mom taking me on drives to the docks downtown and walking around looking at all the different boats. with me occasionally chasing seagulls on the docks. People say the town got worse in recent years, but that doesnt change a single thing about how i feel about my hometown.
Thank you for making this video, it means a lot to me and hopefully my dad when I show it to him
Checked this mall out in 2014 while visiting my brother who was going to TAMUCC at the time. The mall was already pretty empty at that point. I actually have a picture of that Aladins castle in it's former glory.
Subscribed for awhile, after watching a couple of your videos. This is easily top five of your most signature videos. The average UA-camr would not have walked out of here for sure. One of the most dangerous conditions I've ever seen on any abandoned mall videos. Live wires touching standing water. The level of vulgar graffiti is off the charts; even in the tabletop dust. One of those storage areas, midway through, gave the vibe of a zombie horror movie, where I thought, "Don't turn your back!," before it cut. Truly heartbreaking to see what has become of this & other malls. Much respect for your navigation of the hazards and appreciation to you for these uploads.
Great segment, as always! For me, it's so amazing when you're able to find that archival footage when the mall was still alive in the 70s and beyond. So wonderfully nostalgic. Thanks, Ace!
I was born in corpus Christi but lived in Taft all my life.. This was one of the biggest places to go if we were lucky enough to head that way.
My uncle Carlos May his soul rest in peace actually took me here for my 12th birthday... I ended up eating a lot of dots ice cream cotton candy flavor and Even got my very first dancing Barbie pop doll.
It was one of the most magical days of my life.
Rip tio Carlos thanks for the good times tio~🪷
That was the coolest mall back in the 90's as a teen i went there a lot. Thought it was much better than Padre Staples Mall right next door.
Growing I spent a lot of time at Sunrise Mall. It had all the cool stores like Rock & Roll Plus, Rich's, and the Gamer's Guild
I remember this mall in its heyday. It was a nice place to shop with lots of selection. Sad to see this.
Man and to think I helped paint and texture the ceiling it was an awesome place to have worked and helped build this once beautiful place it still holds a very special place in my heart thank you ace
In 1991, I worked at the Dollar Cinema. My first paycheck was about $150.00. My brother and I went to the mall looking to spend every penny. I had shopping bags full of merch from two to three shops and more cash burning through my pocket, and security as per the mall's policy kicked us out for being teenagers unescorted by an adult, and I was employed at the mall at the time! The mall started imposing a dress code upon its patrons. No ball caps for example. They started regulating where teens could gather and wait for their rides. They pretty much said, "teens are not welcome," and that was that for Sunrise Mall.
Because, at the beginning of the first Gulf War, there was a riot in the mall. Teens came by the carloads during their lunch hour. Running through the mall, running up and down the escalators. I work at the Cookie Co. and the store would shake from folks running on the second level. Security and PD began herding folks out the doors; stores closed (I wouldn't serve anyone), it took hours to regain control.
Being here for roughly 3 decades, this is wonderfully edited. The architecture, the nostalgia, especially the arcade and dollar theater. This was a dream spot for childhood memories. The water being seen going down the stairs/elevator. That and the merry go round at the old mall if folks recall! It's interesting how fast society turns into another phase to adapt to, leaving beautiful places like Sunrise Mall to decay from the inside out.
I've lived here and grew up here my entire life. This brought back so many memories of always going to the movies and the arcade with my family. These good times will forever stick in my heart. Great Video!
Thank you for creating the vid, it keeps the spark going🔥. I was born and raised in Corpus Christi.. 84’. There was no comparison which mall was the mall to be at in the early 90s. Padre was considered old peoples mall. Dollar Cinema on the weekends was no joke, the food court and right outside the entrance to the cinema was always packed with people. The small arcade in the cinema was lame, but we still played a few games. This mall was always packed and seemed real fun and everything was an adventure for me at that time. Later in its years I remember when Oshmans was added. The mini basketball court was ok. Walking throughout the mall, just hanging out with my dad and sister, or cousins was the best times. At the corner of the mall there was a small Mexican restaurant that was known for its nachos. This restaurant had a second story which is where I always asked the fam to eat so I could look down to the 1st story. Orange Julius was a favorite of me and my dad.
Outside of the mall in the parking lot there used to be events, such as the streetball tournament, Bayball Ballyhoop, with I watched a few times.
I had the luck of being able to get dropped off a few times at a place that I have tried to research but have found little to nothing on. This was a kids day care type place where you could be dropped off while your mom shops. This was not a normal daycare. This place had a big ball pit in the center, a water pit with bumper boats jungle-alligator themed & sounds, 2 big jumping houses that were set atop a wooden crawl maze that was dark but, had strobe lights flashing throughout with music. In the back of the place there was a move room with movie seating and a movie screen. There were arcade games scattered around the ball pit that was in the center. The game I remember was Conan. You could also order snacks and food from the back area like a real theater.
Frickin art man. The haunting beautiful music mixed with the images of the then and now created a nostalgia bomb in my brain. Perfect
Ty :)
Mind boggling, another Northridge/Century III; I'm amazed the caretaker doesn't throw hands up and walk way. Great video as always, wow
I loved 4 blocks from this mall.
It was built as the other mail, PadreStaples Mall was going down hill. So everyone went to the “new” mall, Sunrise. It was great, it was closer to my house and all the cool kids went there. About 5 years later they built the Burlington strip mall and then started refocusing on Padre Staples mall, so then stores moved from the new mall back to the “new” La Palmera (padre staples mall).
I remember the dollar movie theater and also my cousin had 2 stores in the mall rock n roll and military surplus store in the mall I also remember sitting on Santa claus lap as a child in the mall
I went not long before it officially shut down, its crazy to see how bad it got so fast
Always so fascinating yet heartbreaking at the same time…
I love the old photos. That use to be a great mall to shop at.
I used to go to Sunrise Mall allot through out history from my childhood and it brings me allot of memories since when I was a kid, teenager and adult shopping around with my family and I used to go the Dollar Cinema several times watching a movies allot but my last movie that I went to see Ghostbusters back in 2016 that I was all by myself at the theater alone and I didn't had a date and I don't even exist... but I'm really gonna miss Dollar Cinema so much and it was my favorite movie theater.
FYI. The demolition has begun on Sunrise Mall. Purchased and tearing it down to build hotels and restaurants. Enjoyed your video and thought you might like to know.
Awwww....thank you for documenting this...bittersweet to see, I gotta tell ya. Guess I enjoyed this mall at its best because I have great memories shopping there and seeing special seasonal displays. Wow...what a loss...my parents walked this mall in their later years...sigh...
Thank you so much for exploring our mall as a citizen of Corpus Christi, this mall was part of my childhood growing up
The sun has clearly set here. The only life left are some of the still brilliant flora.
Oh my gosh this was so nice and so fun! I wish you could have gone in every store. I recognized a lot of places and finally saw back rooms and corridors I hadn't before. Love your work. You did her justice.
Wow, what a shame. Such an iconic mall in that state. I had no idea it was even closed, much less destroyed.
Thank you for the tour of this dead mall. Very interesting, but as always. very depressing. Hate to see these once grand malls falling apart like this.
Thank you
I met the caretaker about 5 years ago. She was selling off some of the old store fixtures and I was able to get some of them. I walked all the back hallways and it is such a disappointment the damage people will do for no reason
When I was there, I could not believe the water break, her son was literally in a full force water spray in his face fixing a sprinkler leak, it was wild.....
I'm from Brussels, Belgium, and the biggest mall will be closing part of it's shopping zrea, sp sad to see this, so it is all over the world !
Greetings Tom Belgium.
Thanks for the video Ace. Amazing the amount of damage. Feel bad for the lady and son trying to save the place.
I’m another former kid from Corpus. Sunrise was THE place to be for LESS than 10 years out of 45 years ! Have you seen the movie yet ! It definitely showed the best shots along Ocean Drive and the waterfall section w all the greenery !!!!!
Awesome episode! Your work is truly outstanding!
My mom used to own a flower shop that was located under the escalators called Flowerama. I grew up running around that place from the time I was a baby until probably first or second grade. They always knew where to find me. At the toy store. Kids these days wouldn’t even know what a toy store is. ~John