Inside the Macy’s in Philadelphia, underneath one of the largest pipe organs in the world, which just a few months ago was blasting “Deck the Halls” for a holiday light show, stands a small yellow sign announcing the close-out sale of this iconic department store. It’s one of hundreds of signs posted around the vast sales floor, giving the Renaissance-inspired shopping palace the feeling of a much less glamorous retailer, closer to a discount chain than the ritzy department stores of old. Macy’s last month announced plans to close the store in March, ending more than a century of department stores continuously occupying the ground floor of the Wanamaker Building. The 12-story, granite-walled structure was the brainchild of retail pioneer John Wanamaker, who opened the first department store in the US at the location in 1911. Eventually, it would become one of several stores along Market Street known as the “Big Six,” of which Macy’s is the last remaining inheritor. Keep reading here.—AV |