Legacy

Forgive me for my absence this past week. One week ago today, my father, Robert Lackmeyer, died very unexpectedly. His story is pretty much one that will stay private and didn’t have a happy ending. But there is one detail I’ll share now – and it’s his involvement with the now long dormant Century Center Mall.

As I’ve shared previously, my family is from New York. I was born in New York, and my parents were both born and raised in New York. Their parents were born and raised in New York. And their parents? Well, that part of the family tree involves some pretty typical Ellis Island stories – the kind of immigrant tales that made America what it is today.

There are holes in this story. I do not know why my dad and the company he represented, New York’s J.D. Posillico Co., saw Oklahoma City as an attractive target for development and investment.

I also do not have a complete list of the properties my dad developed on behalf of his employers. He was a certified public accountant, but his career was never limited to completing tax returns. He was a far more complex man, brilliant in many ways, yet far from perfect.

I remember our family first visiting Oklahoma City as construction wrapped up on the Willow Cliff Apartments at NW 50 and Meridian. The grand opening included, as I recall, a big picnic for new tenants and a fireworks show over the adjoining lake. I was mesmerized, and I thought about how cool it would be to live at Willow Cliff.

He also oversaw the company’s investment in the Broadhollow and LeMarquis Apartments. This was in the mid-1970s, and the economy was very shaky. But energy was beginning to boost fortunes in sleepy Oklahoma City. Maybe this alone attracted such investment.

I also don’t know how my father and his employers became interested in developing the first hotel and retail mall under the Urban Renewal program underway in downtown Oklahoma City. I do know they were not the first team signed up for the project. I also know that steel shortages and local “politics” led to a three-year-long delay in construction getting underway. And as the hotel neared completion I began to repeatedly hear my father complaining about an Oklahoma City developer forced upon the New York interests. I won’t name names, but I will say this: the same man did not enjoy a good reputation later in life and was involved in efforts that were widely despised among preservationists and urban core activists.

The hotel had a successful opening under my father’s role as developer, while Century Center floundered under the other individual. I still remember attending the hotel’s grand opening and marveling at the changes underway downtown. I did not know, nor appreciate, that incredible landmarks like the Baum Building and Criterion Theater were torn down to make way for the mall, which remained an empty shell. The “local partner” changed design plans that originally called for storefronts facing the street, and instead created blank, brick and tilt-up concrete walls facing the outside with huge grassy setbacks from the street.

Believe me, I’d love to name names on this.

Robert Lackmeyer, right, overlooks plans for Century Center Mall with Mario Posillico inside an unfinished storefront in the mall.

According to what my father told me in later years, his company paid $1 million to the “local partner” to remove him from the project. My family moved to Oklahoma City in 1977 and soon my father was in The Oklahoman giving updates on efforts to redevelop the mall.

So what made my father significant enough that I announced his passing on Twitter? Was it truly newsworthy, or was this just my way of paying tribute?

To those who say this is purely personal, well, yeah, maybe it is. The years spent on this project in the 1970s and early 1980s were a huge influence on my becoming interested in urban redevelopment and the history of downtown Oklahoma City. I witnessed the last dying gasp of the old downtown and the painful, delayed birth of the new downtown.

But also consider this: Robert Edward Lackmeyer was the last person, to date, who created a genuine downtown retail hub in Oklahoma City that drew a variety of restaurants, clothing stores, salons, gift shops, a game arcade, a florist, antique store, art gallery, fitness center and newsstand. He even successfully landed an FAO Schwartz toy store.

It wasn’t easy. For a while he toyed with the idea of setting up a flexible retail space – a concept I can best compare to what is now known as “pop up shops.” This rendering is what I remember him playing with at the time:

But against all odds, he really did pull off an impressive variety of retail tenants for a mall that was in a downtown that was hardly functional at the time.

This blurry photo from an advertisement is the only image I’ve found from the “glory days” at Century Center.

He almost pulled off a re-invention of downtown retail where others would fail from the 1970s to present. My father was riding high. News accounts followed him as he visited with then Mayor Patience Latting and photos show my parents at various banquets hosted by the newly opened Sheraton.

There’s no one setback that killed Century Center. A fire intentionally set by owners of the fitness center (an insurance scheme gone bad) in 1981 didn’t help. The blaze did quite a bit of damage, but could have been far worse if the two masked men who set the fire hadn’t been confronted by a security guard. They attempted to overcome him, but fled when he was able to trigger the fire alarm. Investigators found the club’s interior had been doused with some 50 gallons of flammable liquid, and 24 unused railroad flares, walkie-talkies, gas masks and gloves were left behind by the fleeing arsonists.

The oil bust, however, did even more damage to both Century Center and my father’s business. Like many businessmen of the time, he invested heavily in oil ventures even though he did not have the experience or know-how to be successful in such efforts. He attempted to keep his CPA firm alive, eventually moving to smaller digs in the suburbs. Century Center Mall limped on through the late 1980s, and as recently as 1990 it was still home to some scattered offices, restaurants including House Szechwan, Schlotzky’s, Taco Casa, Whirla Whip and Fudge A Little, and five small retail stores; Alta Marie, Elegante Accessories, Em Lou’s, Le Parfums and Taylor’s News Stand, along with the Sheraton Century Center Tag Agency.

The mall had already sold at least once, maybe more, when the city council toyed with the idea of buying it and turning it into additional conference space in the early 1990s. By the late 1990s, it was pretty much the empty shell we see today.  Interests affiliated with Mark Moore bought the property earlier this year, and they’ve released renderings showing a potential renovation they may pursue in the near future.

So that’s it. That’s the story. Robert Edward Lackmeyer, the one man who came closest to re-establishing a downtown retail mall during the height of Oklahoma City’s urban renewal era, died last week. He was 72. He was also my father.

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Comments

[...] to Steve Lackmeyer This is a very interesting and personal tribute by Steve to his father. Legacy | OKC Central Reply With [...]

Thank you for sharing…love the name of the Mexican rest. in the ad, anyone know anything about it?

I remember the Century Mall from 1980-1982. During All State Orchestra/Band/Choir we stayed in the hotel (and practiced in the Skirvin). In the evenings, we were at the mall. It was busy and vibrant. Later..in the early 90s…I attended bar exam classes at the hotel and remember we all went to Schlotsky’s every day for lunch. It was busy since there were so few restaurants downtown then. (Also, Schlotsky’s is awesome!)

It was fun to learn more about the history. Thank you. And condolences.

Thanks for sharing the memories. Your family has been in the minds of many of us. Take care.

What an amazing legacy you have with downtown OKC. You are the right man for the job you have.

I wonder if there’s any chance we can get the new owners to rename the Century Center following renovations to “The Lackmeyer Center”… it would be neat to see it filled up again yet still associated with that name.

You’re kind Shawn, but let’s make Century Center a place that won’t scare people away!

great writeup, steve. i’m glad you decided to follow your passion and become a writer. you are indeed the man for the job.

I enjoyed this blog, Steve. I am sorry for your loss. His legacy lives in with you, and what an interesting insight into what drives you to cover OKC so thoroughly and passionately.

Great story…I feel like I read your heart…
My condolences to you and your family.
God Bless

All the best to you, sir, in your time of grieving. It’s never easy to lose a parent. I wish you peace and fond memories.

By the way, I actually shopped at the Century Center one Christmas. (Showing my age.) Bought gifts at FAO Schwartz and other shops.

HI Steve,

I am really sorry for your loss. No one understands how mainful it is to loose a father until they experience for themselves. Mine has been gone for 15 years and I still miss him.

Bob

Sorry about your loss, Steve

Steve, really touched by your post. Having met your dad, I can see how he had the successes he did have. He was a character and a charmer. I enjoyed talking with him very much. As you have been a very good friend of mine for years, I am also aware some of the reasons why I know you had to dig deep to write this piece.

It’s a fitting tribute; well deserved considering the things he DID accomplish, and a poetic development considering the writer and the forum.

But perhaps the BEST thing that he did for downtown and for Oklahoma City was produce a son that cares about them as much as you do and who works so hard to make sure the best and truest efforts are given to the city’s renaissance. I’m certain he was proud of that.

My condolences on your loss.

Thank you for your blog. Truly sorry for you loss. I can’t imagine not having my Dad around.

Steve, although I never had the opportunity to meet your dad, I had always wondered what took him to OKC and what happened there. In 1973 I joined a CPA firm in Farmingdale and he had recently left them to join J.D.P. as CFO. I have to tell you what a legend he was at that firm and how admired he was there, especially some of the staff there that considered him a legend. Condolences to you and your family.

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