New look for Old World Village
Marie Ekberg
Cyndie Bischof was 2 years old when her father, Joe Bischof, developed
Old World Village in 1978, and she has witnessed many of its struggles
and failures firsthand.
Now, like a loving older sister, the 23-year-old fledgling entrepreneur
feels compelled to help the mock Bavarian hamlet on Center Avenue, filled
with an eclectic array of services, shops and restaurants, to achieve
success any way she can.
“I want to create a new era at the village,” she said.
Armed with a sizable inheritance from her grandmother, Bischof envisions
an Old World Village that offers something for the younger generation,
like music and movies, as well as the trademark European import stores.
And perhaps most of all, she’d like to form a merchants’ association to
coordinate the efforts of the individual business owners who usually
operate independently.
Bischof had inspiration for her plan.
“When I experienced the wonderful atmosphere of small shops in Amsterdam
I decided it would be a perfect concept for Old World,” she said.
She said she wants to draw the younger generation to the village with
attractions including an alternative movie theater screening European
films.
“The key is the night life,” Bischof said. Her restaurant has already
started a new nightclub, Europa.
“But that means longer opening hours and less complaining about noise
from the entertainment facilities,” Bischof added.
There is hardly any foot traffic through the village’s cobblestone
streets now, and many business owners have had to find new ways to
survive.
“It’s the closest thing to a cemetery,” said Gifts of the Spirit owner
Carol Roesel, who plans to move out. “Here, I hardly make 5 cents a day
and I am embarrassed when visitors ask me why it is so dead.”
Many shops in the village have closed, some surviving only a couple of
months.
Mary Perez knows this firsthand. She had to close her art gallery two
months ago after selling only two paintings in a year. And her paralegal
business is going shutting down in January because of new laws that come
into effect.
“You have to do a lot of stuff to make ends meet,” said Perez, owner of
Mary’s Magic Closet.
Some merchants are using cyberspace to market themselves and sell their
products. Others arrange special events, such as a Russian music evening,
that draw customers to their store.
Erwin Hermanns’ crystal and nutcracker store benefits from the more than
10,000 people on their mailing list and invites world renowned porcelain
artists and nutcracker makers to their store each year.
“If businesses would take responsibility and do more marketing by
themselves, it would bring in more foot traffic,” said Hermanns.
Many retailers claim part of the reason for dropping sales is the shift
by businesses to service, rather than retail.
“Soon there will be no specialty stores to visit and it will be a dead
village,” said Alfred Skistimas, owner of Edelweiss Inn.
Skistimas and most other business owners are embracing Bischof’s plan to
revitalize the village.
“Cyndie’s plan is exactly what this village needs and what it is designed
for,” said Skistimas.
These plans will most likely meet resistance from some of the older
residents who want peace and quiet.
“There is a lot of old world thinking,” Perez said. “We need to get new
blood in here.”
And that is just what Bischof has in mind when she suggests the creation
of a merchant’s association that will screen which businesses will be
suitable for the new Old World.
“But that is discrimination not to let the owners rent out the building
to any business they want,” argued Jack King, the owner of the Associated
Financial Services Group.
Bischof also has plans to launch monthly festivals like Oktoberfest to
bring more activity to the center, and to attract investors to open new
shops.
Bischof passionately believes her plan will be successful “because it is
nothing that anyone can imagine.”
“It’s time to gear the Old World Village to a new generation,” she said.
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