Inglês, perguntado por kirapgaleao1, 7 meses atrás

Why the Death of Malls Is About More Than Shopping By JOSH SANBURN July 20, 2017 The Schuylkill Mall in Frackville is open for business, but you have to look hard to know it. The stores that have shut down- Sears, Kmart, Spencer Gifts, Hallmark Cards-far outnumber the dozen businesses that remain. 1. ____ Teenagers met to flirt while seniors walked around. "I had to say excuse me a million times to get to work," says Jane Krick, a waitress at Suglia's Pizzeria & Restaurant, the last full-service restaurant standing. "It was full of people. Now we get a million phone calls a day asking, Are you still open?" It won't be for long 2 By 2022 anah

Soluções para a tarefa

Respondido por Keilagatinhapr
0

Resposta:

Explicação:Por que a morte dos shoppings envolve mais do que compras Por JOSH SANBURN 20 de julho de 2017 O Schuylkill Mall em Frackville está aberto para negócios, mas você precisa procurar muito para saber. As lojas que fecharam - Sears, Kmart, Spencer Gifts, Hallmark Cards - superam em muito a dúzia de empresas que permanecem. 1. ____ Os adolescentes se reuniam para flertar enquanto os idosos passeavam. "Eu tive que pedir desculpas um milhão de vezes para chegar ao trabalho", diz Jane Krick, uma garçonete da Pizzaria e Restaurante Suglia, o último restaurante com serviço completo em pé. "Estava cheio de gente. Agora recebemos um milhão de telefonemas por dia perguntando: Você ainda está aberto?" Não será por muito tempo 2 Em 2022 anah

Respondido por ackserafim
1

Resposta:

1) A decade ago, the Schuylkill Mall, with its 90 stores, restaurants and knickkack kioskis, was a part of daily life in this part os Pennsylvania.

2) In early May, management gave the remaining tenants 60 to 90 days to close up shop. Tenants expect the property to be demolished.

3) Since 2002, department stores have lost 448,000 jobs, a 25% decline.

4) It was the home of first jobs and blind dates, the place for family photos and ear piercings, where goths and grandmothers could somehow walk through the same doors and find something they all liked.

5) Between 2010 and ’13, mall visits during the holiday season, the busiest shopping time of the year, dropped by 50%.

6) Today, much of that time has been given over to busier lives and second jobs and apps that let you swipe right instead of haunt the food court. Malls were built for patterns of social interaction that increasingly don’t exist.

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