BJ’s Coming to Shops on Broadway in Hicksville


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Redevelopment of Shops on Broadway in Hicksville

A group of investors, including Kenneth Schuckman of BTF Capital, KABR Group, and a joint venture of AJM Real Estate and Burman Real Estate, submitted a site plan to redevelop the Shops on Broadway mall in Hicksville, Long Island.

Key Features of the Redevelopment Plan

  • A new, 105,000-square-foot freestanding BJ's Wholesale Club building, including a gas station and EV charging stations.
  • Demolition of the vacant Macy's building and adjacent retailers, to be replaced with parking.
  • Conversion of mall corridors to open-air space.
  • Construction of a 70,000-square-foot building for restaurants, forming an entertainment wing called 'The District'.
  • Negotiations with new theater operators to replace Showcase Cinemas, which is closing in January 2024.

The investors purchased the majority of the mall (excluding Target, Ikea, and other parcels) in February 2024 for $40 million.

Current Status and Future Prospects

The plan addresses the mall's high vacancy rate, exacerbated by the pandemic and the closure of major tenants like Macy's and Old Navy. Despite these setbacks, the mall retains significant assets, including Round1 bowling alley, Target, and Long Island's only Ikea.

The proposal highlights the mall's strategic location, its proximity to major highways, and the strong economic demographics of the area.

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Kenneth Schuckman and fellow investors have proposed adding a BJ’s Wholesale Club and a three-story building for restaurants in their proposed redevelopment of the mall Shops on Broadway in Long Island’s Hicksville.

The BTF Capital founder and a group of regional partners, including New Jersey-based KABR Group and a joint venture formed between Long Island-based AJM Real Estate and Burman Real Estate, submitted a site plan to the town of Oyster Bay on Monday. 

They also presented their plans at the Commercial Industrial Brokers Society of Long Island’s meeting on Tuesday, Newsday reported. 

The partnership teamed up in February to buy the majority of the mall, at 358 Broadway Commons, for $40 million from UBS Group AG.

The transaction included 730,000 of the site’s 1.1 million square feet, as the mall’s Target, Ikea, and four other parcels of land were not included in the sale. 

If plans are approved, a BJ’s Wholesale Club would be located in a new, freestanding 105,000-square-foot building that would include a gas station and electric vehicle charging stations. BJ’s has 12 stores open on Long Island. 

The redevelopment would also demolish a vacant 300,000-square-foot Macy’s building as well as tear down other retailers adjacent to Macy’s, all of which would be replaced with parking. 

Plans also call for converting the mall’s common corridors to open-air space, establishing an entertainment wing called The District, which would house the Round1 bowling alley, and constructing a 70,000-square-foot building for restaurants. 

Showcase Cinemas announced in September that its movie theater at the mall is scheduled to close Jan. 5 because its operator didn’t renew its lease. The ownership group is in talks with several other theater operators to take over the space, Shuckman told the outlet. 

If the theater remains, it will be included in The District, but possibly downsized.

The mall has struggled with vacancy rates for several years. The pandemic exacerbated its low occupancy; anchor tenant Macy’s closed in early 2020, and a 17,000-square-foot Old Navy shut down in June 2023. 

Despite those setbacks, the mall still has significant assets such as the Round1 bowling alley, Target, and Long Island’s only Ikea retailer, which are the site’s largest property holders. Both Ikea and Target own their buildings within the mall.  

“It’s a superb location,” Scott Burman, founder of Burman Real Estate, told Newsday. “It’s right in the heart of Nassau County. It’s within a couple minutes’ drive of the LIE and the [Northern State] Parkway. And the surrounding [economic] demographics are incredible.”

— Caroline Handel 

Read more Commercial Tri-State Long Island investors buy Hicksville mall off discount rack  Commercial New York Supermarket, movie theater drop leases on Long Island  Development Tri-State After Oyster Bay rezoning, 141-unit Hicksville project moves forward

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