Tag Archives: Pal’s Apparel

Year in Review: The most popular stories of 2023, click by click

Over the past year, we’ve spent an enormous amount of time writing about two topics: the Broad Street Market fire and homelessness.

You may not know that, though, judging from your clicks.

Our readers always surprise us, and 2023 was no exception. Sure, you read our hard news, eat-your-broccoli-type content. But you were just as likely (maybe more) to click on less-serious stuff like restaurant and business stories.

Hey, that’s why we serve up a varied menu here at TheBurg. Local news should reflect the wide range of what’s happening in a community.

So, as we wrap up 2023, here’s our annual review of the top-10 most-read stories of the past year, as tallied by your page views from our website.

No. 10. Governor’s Islands. Back in 2022, our most-read story came as a big surprise to me. In August of that year, we reported that two large mudflats in the middle of the Susquehanna River—Independence Island and Bailey’s Island—were up for sale after more than a century in the same family. Everyone wanted to know: who would buy these unbuildable mosquito nests? In 2023, we found out. In early February, we broke the news that the commonwealth, specifically the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, had purchased the pair for $160,000 in order to conserve the land and keep it public. This island news was not No. 1 again this year, but it still ranked highly, clocking in as our 10th most-read story of the year.

No. 9. Sip on This. Every year, one story vastly exceeds our expectations. Often, this is a rather basic item that we think will have only smallish community interest—and then, to our total surprise, it blows up. In 2023, that story was our March online article about the first-ever SoMa Sips Beer, Wine & Spirits Festival. The story was a brief, just-the-facts-ma’am preview of a booze-based block party slated for late April in downtown Harrisburg. Why did the story prove to be so popular? Your guess is as good as mine, though my guess is, well, all the booze.

No. 8. Friends & Family. Each year, our online-only stories, as opposed to our print magazine stories, dominate the most-read list. Likely, this is because readers have just one option for our web-only content—it’s online or nothing. But, also each year, one or two magazine stories slide into the most-read list online. In 2023, that story was our November feature on Pal’s Apparel, a Harrisburg streetwear shop. In it, our city reporter Maddie Gittens told the story of how family and friends stepped in to run Pal’s after the sudden death of the store’s beloved owner, Moe Rammouni. On a personal note, this may be my favorite Burg story of the past year.

 

No. 7. Pizza Pass. After all these years in journalism, I still get a little thrill when we beat other news outlets to a story. It actually happens quite a lot, often because we’re out there walking the streets everyday—and we notice things. For instance, one day last March, I was strolling by Cork & Fork downtown when I saw something in the window—a PA Liquor Control Board sign indicating a change of ownership. After a couple of calls, we learned that Millworks owner Josh Kesler was buying the business and the building. This little bit of news about a very popular restaurant came in hot, claiming a top spot on our most-read list.

No. 6. Danger Zone. Unfortunately, our most-read list this year had several bleak spots. In late December 2022, a bicyclist was struck and killed at the intersection of Cameron and Paxton streets, marking the fourth pedestrian or biking death near that intersection over a three-year period. As a result, the local biking community held a vigil for the victim and deployed a “ghost bike” to mark the fatality, which was the basis of our news feature. To be honest, this wasn’t technically a 2023 story. We published it on Dec. 28 of last year, a day after we posted our most-read list for last year. That last week of 2022 proved to be unusually busy news-wise, as the same fate befell our No. 2 story.

No. 5. No Soup for You. Seemingly forever, a classic American diner stood near the corner of Herr Street and Arsenal Boulevard. In fact, when I came to Harrisburg, I ate one of my first meals there. A few years ago, the diner changed ownership then closed and then stood empty. Last September, we reported that a new property owner planned to remove the diner to expand a nearby gas station and convenience store. I guess I’m not the only person in the area with memories of the former American Dream Diner, as our brief story about the project zipped up the charts to land at No. 5 for the year.

No. 4. Restaurant Rebrand. When a business lasts long enough, it becomes part of the fabric of a neighborhood. Such was the case with the Vietnamese Garden at 3rd and Reily streets in Midtown, which opened about 20 years ago. So, when we saw a new sign go up on the building, we had to find out what was happening. As it turned out, the news wasn’t so much a change of ownership as a change of generations. The owners’ son had taken over, in the process updating the interior and changing the name to The LA Squared. Our May story gained a ton of readers and social media shares, showing that the restaurant, in fact, had become a local favorite.

No. 3. Up in Smoke. In 2023, we wrote dozens of stories about the Broad Street Market following the devastating July fire, covering everything from the temporary market to the fate of the vendors to the community impact. Many of these stories were widely read, but only our first, brief, early-morning article about the fire itself made the top-10. If I had one New Year’s wish for Harrisburg, it would be that, in 2024, the negative market news reverses, with the good making the bad a distant memory.

No. 2. Another Slice. So, this has never happened before—two stories on essentially the same topic made our top-10 list for 2023. As mentioned above, the sale of the Harrisburg location of Cork & Fork was our seventh most-popular online story of the year—well, the west shore location did even better. We also broke this story, that the Cork & Fork ownership group had sold the “Osteria” in Hampden Township to Harrisburg restaurateur Brian Fertenbaugh. This news was sliced just right and became the year’s No. 2 most popular story—well sort of. Technically, this also was a 2022 story, as we published it on Dec. 30, several days after we (mistakenly) thought we were done for the year and posted our top-10 list.

No. 1. Night News. For the past few years, restaurateur Justin Browning has been on a tear. He first opened his downtown alt-pub, JB Lovedraft’s, then his brewery/restaurant/venue on the west shore, then his Broad Street Market stand and, finally, his 2nd Street nightclub. It was the last one, deemed “Nocturnal,” that became our No. 1 most-read story of the year. Would I have predicted this? Well, business-opening stories tend to do well, especially when we break them. But 21,000-plus page views? Total surprise.

For a different take on 2023, I will have my annual list of top local news stories in the January magazine, which drops on Dec. 28. Does my list differ from that of our readers, who voted with their clicks? Return on Thursday to find out!

Lawrance Binda is publisher/editor of TheBurg.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams presented the city’s proposed 2024 budget at a council meeting

Our December issue of the magazine dropped this week and between our holiday-themed stories and artwork, you’ll be ready to start the Christmas countdown. Make sure to grab a copy after catching up on our local news from this week, below.

Bob’s Art Blog discusses the newest exhibit at The Millworks and lists must-visit local galleries around central PA for holiday shopping. Click here to read.

December is here, prompting our publisher to reflect on the year at TheBurg. Click here to read his publisher’s note.

Emily Drobnock has exceeded her longtime dream, having opened not only one, but three boutiques in the past several years, our magazine story reported. Knock Knock Boutique, which has locations in Elizabethtown and Hershey, and Bella Sera Boutique in Hershey, offer jewelry, clothing and gifts.

Harrisburg posted a notice urging people living in Riverfront Park to move their belongings, our reporting found. According to the city, the increase in homeless encampments in the park has created a sanitation issue, though encampment occupants say they have nowhere to go.

JoJo’s Barbershop is slated to open in downtown Harrisburg’s SoMa neighborhood, our online story reported. The shop will provide washes and cuts to men, women and children, as well as specialty services including coloring, undercuts and hair design.

Mayor Wanda Williams presented Harrisburg’s proposed 2024 budget at a City Council meeting on Tuesday, our online story reported. The $109.4 million proposed budget does not include a tax hike, but would raise residents’ monthly trash bills.

Notable December events kick off this weekend in Harrisburg with plenty of holiday-themed activities. For an even longer list of happenings, click here.

Pal’s Apparel, a Harrisburg menswear store, remained open after owner Moe Rammouni suddenly passed away in June, our magazine story reported. Rammouni’s family and friends are not only keeping the doors open, but are continuing to grow the business to honor the owner’s legacy.

Sara Bozich has a list of winter and holiday-themed activities for your weekend in the Harrisburg area. Find them all, here.

Seven Democrats are hoping to be the party’s nominee next year to represent the 10th congressional district. In his column, our publisher shares how he believes that the winner will be whoever out-hustles the rest of the field.

Veterans Outreach of Pennsylvania announced William Habacivch as its new executive director, our online story reported. Habacivch, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, replaces Jordan Ames, who left the position in August.

Ward of Health, a former Broad Street Market vendor, is opening a new restaurant location in downtown Harrisburg, our online story reported. The shop will offer plant-based breakfast and lunch options.

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The Best of Pal’s: Following tragedy, Harrisburg menswear store keeps the doors open with the owner’s legacy front and center

Mohammed “Moe” Rammouni and son.

If you scroll through the Instagram feed for Pal’s Apparel, you’ll see mostly pictures of clothes and customers, which characterizes the store well.

In between the rows of photo squares showing off carefully curated outfits are pictures of customers, smiling with a Pal’s branded bag in hand. Others show the flagship downtown Harrisburg storefront through the years, serving as digital evidence of the work put into revamping the store.

With every several swipes through the social media feed, you’ll see the smiling face of owner Mohammed “Moe” Rammouni. Sometimes, he’s posing with a customer. In other pictures, he’s showing off his clothes.

A post dated Feb. 1, 2020, shows Moe in front of his second Pal’s location in the Capital City Mall, which he was just opening. The photo’s captioned, “Working on it—Our 2nd location the #grind continues Big things coming.”

Big things would come for Pal’s, and still are coming, but not without deep tragedy.

In June, Moe, 34, suffered a heart attack. One moment, he was helping a group of regular customers at the shop, and, later that evening, he was gone.

Moe left behind a close-knit family—his wife Dana, a 1-year-old son, friends and a growing business.

“Everybody’s still in shock,” said Rani Rammouni, Moe’s older brother.

But Pal’s didn’t close. Since Moe’s passing, Rani and Rizz, Pal’s longtime store manager, along with the rest of the family, have come together to keep the business, Moe’s passion project, alive.

“I’m doing this for a couple people—not for me,” Rani said. “It’s for his kid, his wife, mom and dad, Rizz and the community. I think it’s fair to say that the community needs this store.”

Rizz

Couldn’t Be Stopped

Rizz remembers his first visit to Pal’s soon after the store opened in 2017. He saw a red carpet lining the sidewalk up to the front door and was instantly intrigued.

Inside, he’d find the streetwear-style clothes he loved, but what he didn’t know was that he’d also find a best friend.

“Immediately, me and Moe clicked,” he said. “We were both like the same soul in different bodies. I’m a happy-go-lucky guy, and so was he.”

Rizz became a regular customer and supporter of the store, even giving Moe money out of his paychecks to help the young business. Several months later, Rizz started working at Pal’s, and the pair became partners in striving for success. In the early days, Rizz had three other jobs while working at Pal’s. He believed in Moe’s vision and would hustle to be a part of it.

“There wasn’t any other store like this in the area. Moe was the first to do it,” Rizz said. “I saw his vision. When we came together, it was like we couldn’t be stopped.”

Early on, the duo would go out daily to hand out flyers and business cards advertising Pal’s. They’d hit the bars to meet potential customers, and Rizz would even hand out flyers during his shifts driving for Uber.

“I was here day in and day out,” Rizz said. “I used to work seven days a week in this place. This was my life. It still is.”

Over the years, Moe would expand Pal’s into the Capital City Mall and even into the Hershey Tanger Outlets. Both stores have since closed, as Moe decided to focus solely on his downtown location. In recent years, Moe had big plans in the works. He wanted to upgrade the Harrisburg shop, stock new clothing brands and planned to again expand to another storefront.

But for Moe, it wasn’t just about getting new patrons in the door. Moe and Rizz were all about building relationships with customers, special ordering items for them, and even occasionally handing out jackets or sweatshirts to homeless community members.

“It’s more than just a store; we show love to our people,” Rizz said. “We like to be here for the community.”

When Moe passed, Rizz stepped up to run the day-to-day operations of the downtown storefront. His best friend’s passing “lit a fire under him” to keep pushing for Pal’s growth. He’s taken on new responsibilities like meeting with clothing brand representatives and going to apparel trade shows.

The responsibilities can be overwhelming, but Rizz never questioned staying at Pal’s.

“I knew I was staying,” he said. “I would never let this close.”

Rani Rammouni

Small Victories

When Pal’s originally opened, Moe’s brother Rani was very involved in the business. Rani, owner of LBR Properties and a consultant for Touch of Color Flooring, owned the building and leased the space to Moe, helping him paint and fit out the space. But eventually, his involvement lessened.

“I didn’t really know what he had until he left,” Rani said. “I underestimated what he had here. He had something really good.”

When Rani talks about Moe, he paints a picture of the always-smiling baby of the family, the loveable one, everyone’s favorite. Moe was smart, driven and kind, he said.

Rani and Moe grew up in Ann Arbor, Mich., the children of Palestinian immigrants. The entrepreneurial spirit ran strong through the family. Their father was a small business owner who taught his sons the value of grit and hard work. Like many in his family, Moe was driven to find success.

“Moe wanted that,” Rani said. “He wanted to defeat the odds and he did.”

Moe’s death has been traumatic for Rani. Losing his younger brother “ripped open old wounds,” as his older brother also passed away 21 years ago.

But for Rani, keeping Pal’s open helps him keep a part of Moe with him.

“It’s like the only lifeline that we have for him, outside of his kid and his wife,” he said. “When you walk in this store, you think of him.”

While Rizz manages the store, Rani handles the business side of Pal’s, with intentions to keep the store not only open, but growing.

In October, Rani and Rizz painted and installed new clothing racks at Pal’s, something Moe had wanted to do. They also stocked up on new apparel and “‘fits,’ or whatever they call them,” Rani said with a chuckle. He’s working on learning the industry lingo and brand names, he admitted.

Rani also plans to add a new upgrade to the store every several months.

“Those are going to be our small victories,” he said. “People underestimate the small victories. There are small victories every day that get you to the big picture.”

Rani hopes that, with each small victory, Pal’s inches closer to his goal for the store: to make it the leading men’s apparel store in the tri-county area. That was Moe’s vision, and now it’s Rani’s.

As Rizz manages the store and interacts with customers, he keeps in mind Moe’s values—whether it’s through warmly welcoming every customer or staying until closing, even on the slow days.

Moe’s lasting presence is also felt by loyal customers.

“I had just talked to him that day,” said Chiun Wallace, a longtime Pal’s patron, of the day Moe passed. “It was a horrible feeling. He was one of the coolest, most genuine people.”

For Moe, Pal’s was never just about selling clothes, but about making people feel good—helping them feel comfortable and confident. Rani has been learning to embrace that. Once a suit-and-tie guy, he’s dressing more casually these days.

“I want to be who I am and be comfortable with how I am,” he said. “And maybe I establish a little more urban apparel in my lifestyle.”

The Pal’s Instagram page is just as active as ever. These days, you’ll see posts from Rizz and Rani. They narrate several videos showing renovation progress, advertising sales and displaying new apparel.

In September, a post showed Rani behind the front counter, smiling, talking to a Pal’s customer of seven years; Rizz is filming.

It’s a new era at Pal’s, and while everyone’s still grieving, they also have a lot of hope and a drive to continue what Moe started.

“I’m proud to be a part of this,” Rani said. 

Pal’s Apparel is located at 306 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg. Find them on Instagram at @palsapparel717.

 

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Retail Therapy: More people are choosing to live, work and play in Harrisburg. Could a retail revival be next?

Boutiques and department stores brought shoppers to downtown Harrisburg in droves through the 1960s. This undated photo from the Dauphin County Historical Society shows a bustling scene outside Bowman’s Department Store on Market Street, which is now part of Strawberry Square.

It was close to 3:30 p.m. on a gray Monday afternoon when I found Moe Rammouni ringing up customers at Pal’s Apparel, his high-end streetwear boutique in downtown Harrisburg.

His clientele—two local guys, Rammouni said, who probably found Pal’s on Facebook or Instagram—came in seeking tracksuits and puffy parkas. It was Rammouni’s first sale of the day.

“Business is great now, but there’ve been some growing pains,” Rammouni said. “And there still are. You gotta have a lot of patience to do this.”

Rammouni has been in his storefront at 306 N. 2nd St.for just over a year. But he can already tell you what more seasoned merchants have been saying for decades: retail isa tough business. E-commerce has created a market where prices are low, consumer information abounds, and free, two-day shipping reigns supreme. Those conditions have devastated national chain retailers. In the past year alone, legacy brands like Sears and Bon-Ton have closed stores and liquidated inventory. Suburban malls are going dark as a result.

If not even the biggest brands can compete with online retail giants, where does that leave mom-and-pop shops?

These independent merchants have historically congregated in American cities, where dense populations and compact storefronts offered a symbiotic shopping experience. But the migration of people and businesses to the suburbs have decimated urban retail centers across the country. Harrisburg is no exception. The downtown boutiques, grocers and department stores that once animated the city’s streets are long gone. Their storefronts found second lives as offices and eateries, if they’ve been filled at all.

“To my left and my right, there’s vacant, commercial class-A space that could be turned into something magnificent,” said Rammouni. “I’d love to see more retail on 2nd Street.”

Even as they watch big-name competitors fold, merchants in Harrisburg think it’s a good time to start a small business. They say that the hardships rocking national chains highlight the power of independent retailers, which can offer superior expertise and customer service.

But if current businesses are going to flourish, their owners say, Harrisburg needs to fill its vacant storefronts.

“Don’t get me wrong—I love Harrisburg,” said Anela Bence Selkowitz, one of the city’s newest storefront retailers. “But there’s nowhere to shop.”

Bence recently opened Stash Vintage, a clothing and accessories store, in a shared storefront at 11 S. 3rd St. She’s near the restaurants El Sol and Bricco in the downtown SoMa neighborhood.

“I’d like to see three or four more boutiques on this block,” she said. “If this neighborhood was a destination where people could spend a whole afternoon, it would be a much better situation for us.”

Landlords agree that independent businesses have the best shot at success when they’re part of a dense network of stores. The good news is that Harrisburg’s commercial corridors are emerging from a long period of stagnation. Strawberry Square, the downtown mall that subsumed some of Harrisburg’s old storefronts in the 1970s, had a 40-percent vacancy rate just five years ago, according to Harristown CEO Brad Jones. It’s now at 5 percent.

“There’s been a lot of momentum, but retail is still a very tough sector for us, as it is for everyone else,” Jones said. “I don’t think we’ll ever get back to the way it was… But we are growing our density, and every year, it’s getting better.”

Rise and Fall

If you set out to do your Christmas shopping in Harrisburg in 1950, you wouldn’t have to travel far from 3rd and Market streets. Like most cities, Harrisburg’s central business district boasted everything from small specialty shops to multi-level department stores. Whether you wanted a custom hat, a tailored suit, a new armoire or the latest records, you could buy it in a downtown storefront.

Ken Frew, a librarian for the Dauphin County Historical Society, grew up on Derry Street, where he could pay 5 cents to take the bus to shop in downtown. “You could find anything you wanted down there, and you didn’t need a car to get it,” he said. “You had big anchor stores, sure, but you also had lots of other shops really keeping the place together.”

As a historian who has lived his whole life in Harrisburg, Frew has watched the city’s downtown evolve for decades. Its first major change came in the 1940s, he said, when customers started to favor their personal vehicles over public transportation. The shift carved the first cavities into Harrisburg’s downtown streetscape, as property owners began razing buildings to pave surface parking lots.

But the rise of the personal automobile dealt an even deadlier blow to cities. It facilitated movement to suburban communities, where residents could retreat after a day’s work in a downtown office. Segregationist housing policies and discriminatory lending practices accelerated the exodus. Urban planners played their part, too. Starting in the 1950s, cities including Harrisburg began to reroute major city streets with one-way traffic patterns. Under the guidance of Mayor Nolan Ziegler, Harrisburg officials reduced parking lanes and converted 2nd and Front streets to one-way, multilane mini- highways in 1956. “We are interested only if proper ingress and egress is assured,” Ziegler said at the time.

Ziegler and his engineering team got what they wanted. Following the 2nd and Front street conversions, it became easier than ever for commuters to zoom through Harrisburg as they came and went from work. The city’s small businesses became an unintended casualty.

“The one-way streets made it difficult to maneuver, and it was the end of downtown,” Frew said. “When people got off work, they went out of the city and stopped shopping. My dad was always grousing that it slowed business.”

Harrisburg’s population was close to 90,000 in 1950; by 1980, it had dipped to 53,000. As white, middle-class customers flocked to the suburbs, retailers followed suit. Harrisburg got its first suburban-style shopping center in 1951, when Kline Plaza opened on S. 25th Street. That, according to Frew, was “the first sign that retail was starting to plummet” downtown. The Harrisburg East Mall followed in in 1969. Some local business owners, like the men’s clothing retailer Allan Stuart, tried their luck opening satellite branches in suburban malls. But most found that their storefront model didn’t translate to the new setting. Others couldn’t match the prices of their chain competitors.

The erosion of the downtown merchant base was gradual, according to Stuart’s son, Jeb Stuart. But by his account, “the bottom fell out of downtown by the 1970s.”

Jeb Stuart recently curated an exhibit for the Historic Harrisburg Association that chronicles downtown retail during the city’s “urban golden age,” from 1918 to 1960. Walking through the exhibit, it becomes clear how much of the city’s retail space has been ceded to other industries. When retailers started to evacuate downtown Harrisburg in the 1950s, developers snatched up vacant storefronts and adapted them to other uses. Today, the Market Street property that once housed S.S. Kresge’s Co, a discount retailer, has become Whitaker Center. SciTech High School now occupies the space once held by G.C Murphy department store.

Many downtown retail spaces were acquired by Harristown Development, which the city created in the 1970s to spearhead urban revitalization projects. Chief among them was the development, in 1978, of Strawberry Square, a downtown mall with 1.4 million square feet of mixed-use office and retail space. Jeb Stuart worked as a leasing agent in Strawberry Square in the 1980s. He and his business partner tried to court national chains to fill first-floor retail spaces. When that didn’t pan out, they focused their efforts on small, mom-and-pop shops that catered to the downtown workforce.

“It was a challenge,” Stuart said. “But there will always be a downtown worker population in Harrisburg, so there will always be a need for some form of retail. But what you need now is retail that’s convenient, that fills a need or that offers a niche—because cool things can become destinations in themselves.”

Support System

The same malls that killed downtown retail in the 1960s and ‘70s are today facing a sea change of their own, thanks to the ascendency of e-commerce.

But does the newest disruption in retail represent a potential resurgence for urban storefronts?

“We all think we’re poised for a comeback,” said Isaac Mishkin, owner of The Plum, a women’s clothing boutique. “I see it inching forward. People are getting smarter and spending more time analyzing what people buy.”

Mishkin, who’s run The Plum from the same brick storefront on Locust Street for 50 years, is one of the lone legacy retailers in Harrisburg. To survive today, he believes that storefront merchants have to offer one thing that e-commerce companies can’t—attentive, experience-driven customer service.

“I learned how to sell the old-fashioned way,” Mishkin said. “We know how to dress customers when they come in. It’s not like department stores today where nobody waits on you.”

As accessories designer Amma Johnson put it, a customer’s most valuable commodity today isn’t money—it’s time. One reason customers have flocked to online retailers is because they can peruse goods and complete a transaction in minutes, eliminating the onerous task of driving to a mall to shop. To compete with that convenience, storefront retailers have to make a customer’s visit worth their while, she said. At her Amma Jo showroom in Strawberry Square, that means offering a pleasant shopping experience that puts the customer first. She’s also branched out into events, hosting networking happy hours and, more recently, a women’s empowerment and entrepreneurship panel. Johnson said that these events do generate sales. But she also sees them as an extension of her brand — the larger, more nebulous “feeling,” Johnson said, that people associate with her name and product. And that feeling can’t be conjured with pixels alone. She pointed out that even online companies are experimenting with brick and mortar retail models.

“A good brand is a good feeling,” Johnson said. “And even as powerful as a brand like Amazon is, they’re doing things like pop-up stores because it’s very hard to build a brand exclusively online.”

Andrew Kintzi, who run the men’s vintage store Midtown Dandy in a storefront he shares with Bence on 3rd Street, echoed what Johnson, Mishkin and other merchants said about running a storefront today.

“In terms of competing with other businesses, it comes down to the customer’s experience,” Kintzi said. “It’s being able to walk in the door, be greeted, trying something on and feeling materials. I want you to come in here, find something you love, and remember buying it here.”

Bence has a different take than her business partner. As she sees it, a good landlord can make or break a

retailer. And she says they’re hard to find in Harrisburg. She and Kintzi tried to set up shop on 3rd Street north of Forster, but were stymied by a paltry inventory of storefronts. Landlords wanted to charge exorbitant rents for sub-par spaces, she said, and wouldn’t accommodate requests to enhance them.

“You need a good deal with a good landlord who will work with you,” Bence said. “Landlords are really awful around here. They want way too much for empty shells.”

She contrasted that with her experience leasing from Harristown, which painted walls and constructed a small build-out in their storefront on S. 3rd Street. They’ll also include Stash and Midtown Dandy in their advertising and promotional materials.

“There’s a support system here, so it doesn’t feel like we’re just being thrown into a space,” Bence said. “It feels more like a partnership with the people who own the building.”

The final thing that retailers say they need is increased density in the downtown retail district. Johnson said that she chose her storefront in Strawberry Square because it offered the best chance to gain organic foot traffic—passersby who might not seek out her store on their own, but encounter her brand while going about their daily business. More than 6,000 people walk through the shopping center each day to shop, eat, work or attend events, according to Jones, making it one of the busiest commercial corridors in the city.

But the workforce population disappears on the weekend, creating wild variations in the pace of customers throughout the week. Retailers say the same is true elsewhere in the city. Chantal Eloundou, who opened Nyianga, a boutique selling African crafts and fabrics on N. 3rd Street, said business is best on days when the Broad Street Market is open, since it draws people down 3rd Street from state office buildings downtown. But the rest of the week can be a challenge.

“More retail would draw in more customers,” she said. “So, I say, the more the better.”

Critical Mass

Building a bigger retail landscape in Harrisburg would do more than just create a shopping destination.

Even though the industry can be precarious, experts say that locally owned businesses remain an essential part of any city’s community and economic development strategy. Besides creating jobs and building wealth for entrepreneurs, a diverse array of shops affords consumers more choice and competitive prices. It also drives tourism. Visitors who have enough reason to shop, eat and pass time in a city just might decide to move in.

“Having businesses, whether it’s retail or restaurants or services, really is a key component in making a thriving city where people want to live and shop and do business,” said Ken Hammaker, vice president at the Community First Fund, which loans to entrepreneurs in low-income communities across the state. “You need that component just as much as you need clean, affordable housing and good quality schools.”

Nobody understands that dynamic better than Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse, who touted his experience as a storefront business owner in both of his mayoral campaigns. Papenfuse and his wife, Catherine Lawrence, opened the Midtown Scholar Bookstore in 2003. In 2009, they moved the store to its current location at Verbeke and N. 3rd streets, into what used to be a movie theater and then a department store.

According to Lawrence, many of the nearby storefronts were underutilized when they moved in.

She and her husband convinced some recalcitrant property owners to sell them their neighboring buildings. County property records show their acquisitions began in 2008, the same year they purchased the two parcels that house the current Midtown Scholar, and continued through November 2013, the same month that Papenfuse won his first term as mayor.

Since he took office, these property holdings have opened Papenfuse to criticism that he prioritizes projects on 3rd Street to his own benefit. He said that it was always part of a greater strategy to build a community-oriented commercial corridor.

“We came in 15 years ago as young retailers interested in generating more foot traffic on this corridor,” Papenfuse said. “We looked at the market, at Midtown Cinema, and saw the potential for more of a critical mass more than just a single anchor store.”

Lawrence and Papenfuse are sympathetic to the challenges facing local retailers today. They know it takes a long time to build a customer base, develop a marketing strategy, and finance an inventory. Speaking as a city official, Papenfuse said that Harrisburg must provide the public services—smooth roads, inviting streets and a public safety presence—that enhance the city’s built environment and encourage tourism. It can also provide practical resources, such as business development programs, through the office of Community and Economic Development.

But speaking as a business owner, he said much of the responsibility for building a retail corridor lies with landlords and merchants who have a shared, community-oriented vision. Like Bence, he reserved special criticism for local landlords, who he says have been historically disinterested in maintaining their properties and identifying good tenants.

According to leaders in Lancaster, good landlords have made all the difference in their downtown business district, which has added more than 100 shops, restaurants and entertainment venues in the past half-decade.

“Historically, we’ve been fortunate that we’ve had a great number of local investors and property owners that are responsible for the fact that we still have this core area of retail downtown,” said Marshall Snively, president of the Lancaster City Alliance, a nonprofit community and economic development group. “They were patient at a time when other cities were leasing to anyone that would lease and very intentional in making sure it was lively retail that would add to the character of the city.”

It’s no coincidence that the evaporation of retail in Harrisburg coincided with the depths of its financial distress, a condition that began brewing in the 1970s and intensified through the 2000s. Today, local officials say that Harrisburg’s long-term recovery depends on whether or not the city can increase its population. But turning daytime workers into full-time, taxpaying residents will take more than new housing and better roads.

The urban theorist Jane Jacobs famously said that the hallmark of a healthy city is the “sidewalk ballet” of people darting between work, errands, meals and entertainment in a humming urban core. Plenty of people in Harrisburg participate in this “ballet” during the week, when almost 50,000 commuters flood the city. But boutiques, bars and restaurants, cultural and entertainment spaces convince them to stick around after hours. And it’s the coexistence of all these elements— apartments, workplaces, businesses and public spaces— that distinguish an urban ecosystem from a suburban office park or housing development. As Hammaker put it, all of these elements are all connected, and no one sector will flourish as long as the others falter.

And that includes retail. At a macro level, the realities of the industry may seem bleak. Dying malls and empty big-box stores have left unsightly cement husks in America’s suburbs. Amazon is colonizing private spaces with smart speaker robots as its CEO controls an ever-growing share of the world’s wealth. But locally, small retail businesses remain an integral component of vibrant, self-reliant cities. They create jobs, animate streets and offer a shopping experience that’s more than just transactional. One need only visit Stuart’s exhibit at the Historic Harrisburg Association to be reminded that retail is an indelible part of Harrisburg’s past. If the city is going to thrive, the same will have to be true in the future.

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Moe Style, No Problems: Pal’s Apparel want to primp you up.

Mohammed Rammouni and Dave Marcheskie. Photo by Dani Fresh.

Crimson plush carpet caressed my Red Wing soles as I stepped inside Pal’s Apparel.

This newly minted menswear store on 2nd Street is cemented between the epicenter of Pennsylvania power and forgotten nights downtown. Skyline gray walls, alabaster trim and rich burgundy leather accents invoke a stark—not sterile—sublime. Pal’s, like contemporary Harrisburg, is a story of hopeful vision.

Mohammed Rammouni sells you on his easy stature and smile before his clothes. The 28-year-old shop owner likes to go by “Moe.” His colloquy is calming; his story is inspiring. It’s hard not to root for the guy.

Moe’s entrepreneurial spirit intersects with his love for the capital city.

The CD East grad helped his family run a mini-mart on Derry Street for several years. Once they sold the market, he worked in retail at the Harrisburg Mall. This is where he fell for helping the style-less feel stylish.

“It always stuck with me,” he said. “When they loved that outfit just as much as you did—it was a great experience.”

Moe left high-styling for ground flooring when his family opened up Big Bob’s outlet. Sure, he can wax about wood grain and tile, but his passion lies within denim and cotton. Moe remains a manager at the flooring outlet, helps his brother flip rentals, and also runs Pal’s. Hustle.

Moe said his friends would often travel to Philly, Queens and D.C. to get clothes nowhere to be found in Harrisburg. He saw opportunity.

He traveled to trade shows in Las Vegas and New York as well as spoke with city residents on what they want to wear. Pal’s Apparel proudly opened around Labor Day. Millennium design icons True Religion and Buffalo David Bitton, as well as rare boutique brands like CIVIL and Mondo New York are in the repertoire. Graphic T-shirts, moto jeans, fresh suede boots and edgy leather jackets are just a few pieces currently on hangers.

“Now, you can get New York here,” Moe said.

My question is: Can the Big Apple survive in the Strawberry?

Moe’s T-shirts range from $15 to $40, jeans from $70 to $125, and leather jackets will run you about a buck-fifty. Honestly, that’s a bargain compared to boutiques in bigger cities. Like many things in Harrisburg, it’s not about price but population. Moe has tapped into a niche market he hopes will be a wellspring. I just hope enough street-style savants see eye-to-eye with his vision. Pal’s promise lies within unique trunk shows, DJs spinning after hours, and a willingness to be flexible with market cravings.

Moe styled me in a camo T (CIVIL) and hoodie leather jacket (Buffalo) with distressed moto jeans (RAW-X), boots (Red Wing Heritage Moc Toe) and aviators. I still firmly believe a crisp suit can make you feel sharp. But, man, nothing boosts confidence like wearing attitude. That’s a feeling you can’t put a price on.


Pal’s Apparel is located at 306 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg Moe Rammouni said he soon will offer men’s blazers and button-downs, as well as ladies’ options. For more information, visit www,palsapparelhbg.com or the Facebook page.

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