Mel Simon, mall developer, dies at 82


STAFF/WIRE REPORT

INDIANAPOLIS — Melvin Simon, the son of a New York City tailor who started what is now the country’s largest shopping-mall company and owned the NBA’s Indiana Pacers with his brother, died Wednesday, a spokesman said. He was 82.

Les Morris, a spokesman for Simon Property Group, which Simon spent nearly 40 years leading, confirmed Simon’s death but said he could not discuss the circumstances. Simon had not made any public appearances in recent months, and his brother had asked for prayers for him at a July event during which the two were honored as Indiana legends.

Simon Property Group has full or partial ownership of more than 300 shopping malls in the United States, Europe and Japan. Simon’s interests extended to politics as he and his wife were major Democratic Party donors and to Hollywood, where he was best known for producing the raunchy teen comedy “Porky’s.”

But Simon’s main business was building and operating enclosed suburban shopping malls across the country, netting him a fortune that Forbes magazine estimated this year at $1.3 billion.

Among the properties owned by Simon Property is the Southern Park Mall in Boardman.

Ownership of the mall transferred to Simon Property when the Indianapolis company acquired DeBartolo Realty Corp. in 1996. Boardman-based DeBartolo Realty oversaw the real estate holdings that were developed by the late Edward J. DeBartolo Sr.

Simon, who grew up in the Bronx, arrived in Indianapolis in the 1950s when he was stationed at the Army’s Fort Benjamin Harrison and entered the commercial real-estate business in the city after his discharge.

“I enjoyed it, but in a couple of years I decided I wanted to be the person to make the decisions,” Simon told Indiana Business magazine in 1991. “That’s how we got into developing.”

He started Melvin Simon & Associates with his younger brother, Herbert, in 1960, concentrating at first on strip centers anchored by grocery stores and pharmacies. The scale of its projects grew until it opened the Mall of America in a Minneapolis suburb in 1992 — running the mega-mall until selling its interest in 2006 — and the Circle Centre Mall in downtown Indianapolis in 1995.

The Simon brothers were credited with keeping professional basketball in Indianapolis when they bought the Pacers in 1983 at the behest of city leaders to head off a deal that could have seen the team move to Sacramento, Calif.

Though Simon’s guests at his estate in suburban Carmel included former President Bill Clinton, and his philanthropy gave $50 million for Indiana University’s cancer center and $10 million to the Indianapolis Museum of Art, he kept a low profile, rarely speaking in public or giving interviews.

Little was said about his recent health except when Herb Simon asked for prayers for him at the state historical society event in July.

“Whatever we have accomplished, I know in my heart he’s a legend of all legends for me,” Herb Simon said at the time. “He started this thing.”

The Simon family has remained the largest shareholder in Simon Property Group, and when the founding brothers stepped down as co-chairmen in 2007, they turned the chairmanship over to Mel’s oldest son, David, who had been its CEO since 1995. One daughter, Deborah Simon, leads the Simon Youth Foundation and another, Cindy Simon Skjodt, heads the Pacers Foundation.

Simon had been married since 1972 to his wife, Bren, a former member of the Democratic National Committee and a leader of numerous charitable and civic organizations. His first wife, Bess Meshulam Simon, died of cancer in 1977, and the Simons later gave $2.1 million toward an Indiana University music center that was named for her in 1995.

Simon had five children, including a son, Max, who died in 1999 at age 25.