I had an interesting trip to the bowels of my Sears store looking for a 6 ft back panel that would match my shelving. Normally, I don't go that deep into Sears FLS stuff because I have my own hidden cavern that is full of crap too. I wish I could post pictures. I can only say, "WOW". What a labyrinth of junk. I never saw one single soul back there in the maze of rooms and warehousing that I wandered through. There was only vaguely a semblance of order. I was in a time warp but all of the cool sh-- had been stolen long ago.
If you watch the show, "American Pickers", you will understand. I have to go back and look again because the amount of retail leftovers is astounding. None of it can be fixed assets. It makes you wonder how much it is still being amortized? The dust is pretty thick if you look and start digging in. I can't believe that OSHA does not come in. How do the fire inspectors not see this sh--?
The one warehouse I walked through had a large sliding wooden barn type door. That is very odd. (our Sears was built in 1966) There were a series of smaller warehouses. No windows anywhere and is pretty dark. You want a haunted house? Perfect.
I just stood there for a few moments and surveyed the situation. It's like the 1970's got thrown in one part of the warehouse and the 80's another. It's wreckage. I bumped an old rack and the plastic tag fell and I felt obliged to put it back because maybe the tag goes to the 70's rack because I think like that.
I think this way, it will cost a sh--load of money to get rid of all of this old sh--. The former employees took anything of value and the rest is just junk save for maybe some pegboard. We are talking multiple semi-loads of absolute crap. Eddie is going to have to pay to get rid of this inventory. No one will buy it. It's a retail graveyard of sorts.
So for the boys on Yahoo who like to chat about what the Layoff says there you go. The front of warehouse is where most of the freight comes in and that is where it stays. It's mostly Kenmore in stock and a few Samsung. All that freight is as the front of the warehouse. No one ventures too far back into the catacombs of Sears retail. I have to go back again. It really should be photographed but the lighting is poor.
It is incredible to imagine what Sears was.