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Scary up real choice: Seasonal Halloween stores help old retail spaces come alive

Scary up real choice: Seasonal Halloween stores help old retail spaces come alive

Credit: AP Photo

This Spirit Halloween store in Manhattan’s Upper West Side sprang up in a vacant Circuit City store.


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The recession hasn't been so scary for Halloween stores. In fact, they are finding better haunts in the graveyards of failed retailers.

The seasonal sellers are taking advantage of the spate of retail bankruptcies and closings to open more -- and larger -- temporary stores this year in better locations. It adds up to an aggressive bid to capture cautious consumers' dollars in an industry that has grown rapidly over the past 10 years.

Spirit Halloween has raised 83 former Circuit City stores from the dead, part of the 100 stores that it has added to the 625 it had last year.

Other smaller competitors are also taking bigger bites this year: Halloween Express, based in Owenton, Ky., and Halloween Adventure, based in Garnet Valley, Pa., have each added about 10 new stores this year.

Halloween falls on a Saturday this year -- the best day according to those in the industry because more adults throw parties -- and retailers are hoping for brisk business.

Despite the recession, IBISWorld Inc., a market-research company, said it expects 2009 sales for costumes and decor to rise 3 percent to $3.8 billion compared with a year ago. CEO Joe Purifico of Halloween Adventure confirmed that sales are "trending up" as the company headed into the important two-week stretch before Halloween.

But seasonal retailers -- which make about 70 percent of their sales in September and October -- face tough competition for market share from lower-priced retailers, such as Target Corp. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc., so visibility is key.

"The bigger the storefront, the bigger impression you have on the consumer and that's the big plus," said Tony Detzi, Spirit Halloween's vice president of operations.

The Spirit Halloween on Manhattan's Upper West Side was bustling on a recent afternoon.

Kids alternately marveled and screamed at the decor on the first floor -- including a life-size Michael Myers from Halloween -- while shoppers browsed costumes ranging from knights in armor to sexy nurses, most for about $30, on the second floor.

Lucy Mateo, 40, an executive assistant in New York who works nearby, said she was surprised at the speed with which the vacant Circuit City morphed into Spirit Halloween.

"I didn't even know it was under construction."

Empty retail space from the closings of Circuit City, Mervyns, Linens 'N Things and Home Depot's Expo Design Center have given the temporary stores plenty to work with.

Suzanne Mulvee, the senior economist at Property & Portfolio Research, estimates that there is 269 million more square feet in vacant retail space -- the equivalent of more than 5,000 full-size Best Buy stores -- across the country compared with a year ago. That gives retailers bargaining power, she said.

Shuttered big-box stores also let retailers have more space, which ultimately translates into more dollars for seasonal retailers.

"It helps to make the store more shoppable, there's more floor space to put out all the product that you want and still have enough elbow room for customers," Purifico said.

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