But turning to look down the secondary corridor, which forms a semicircle around the west side of the building (which, since this is an urban mall, occupies a full block instead of taking the extended linear form of typical suburban malls). The mall's website (which is amazingly outdated and far from professional) has a nice (if similarly old-fashioned) floor plan showing the complicated layout here, which manages to make the mall look even emptier than it is by only labeling a few of the tenants. The directory sign here (which appears to be a sheet of corkboard with printer-paper store logos on it) does show a decent number of stores this way, but I think they're padding the number with stores that are in other parts of the mall and/or minimally open.
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