The Park shopping center in Berkeley Heights, New Jersey signed 6 new retail tenants in recent months, according to ROI-NJ, continuing a lease-up strategy that targets physical-first brands even as the broader market debates retail's future. The center's landlord is filling vacancies left by anchor closures with smaller, specialty tenants who view brick-and-mortar as customer acquisition rather than last-mile distribution.
The new tenants span fitness, specialty food, and personal services — categories where the transaction requires a physical presence and repeat visits drive unit economics. These are not brands testing a pop-up. They are signing multi-year leases in a suburban shopping center, betting that local density and parking access justify the rent against digital customer acquisition costs.
The mechanism: landlords have shifted from anchor-dependent layouts to curated tenant mixes that drive visit frequency. A regional shopping center no longer competes on selection — Amazon owns that. It competes on immediacy, trial, and the marginal cost of a second errand. A tenant paying rent for a 1,200-square-foot endcap is not competing with Shopify. They are competing with the friction of waiting two days for shipping or the risk of buying the wrong size.
For physical product brands, the math works when the store generates enough repeat visits to justify occupancy cost. A candle brand paying $32 per square foot annually in a regional center pencils if in-store conversion is 18-22% versus 2-3% online, and if 40% of first-time buyers return within 90 days. The landlord wants tenants who drive traffic for adjacent retailers. The brand wants access to customers who will not click an ad but will buy after smelling the product.
The steal: a small physical-product brand tests retail without signing a lease by negotiating a consignment deal or a revenue-share pilot with an existing tenant. Approach a complementary retailer already in the center — a home goods store, a gift shop, a specialty grocer — and propose a 90-day test on a 70/30 revenue split (you keep 70%). Deliver 12-24 SKUs on a small fixture you design and install yourself. Track scan data weekly. If sell-through exceeds $240 per square foot annually (about $18 per square foot per month for your small footprint), you have proof for a direct lease conversation or a second location.
Your cost: product, fixture (under $400 for a countertop display), and weekly restocking. No rent, no built-out space, no signage package. The retailer gets margin on product they did not buy. You get real foot traffic and point-of-sale data that tells you whether the center's customer base will pay your price. If it works, you approach the landlord with conversion data and ask for short-term space at the same center. If it does not, you pull the fixture and test a different product mix or a different landlord.
The Park's lease-up reflects a broader pattern: landlords are choosing tenants who activate the center rather than fill square footage. A brand that drives visits and generates margin for adjacent tenants earns better lease terms than a brand signing space to warehouse inventory near customers.