The Economist: Birth, death and shopping

The rise and fall of the shopping mall

THE Southdale shopping centre in Minnesota has an atrium, a food court, fountains and acres of parking. Its shops include a Dairy Queen, a Victoria's Secret and a purveyor of comic T-shirts. It may not seem like a landmark, as important to architectural history as the Louvre or New York's Woolworth Building. But it is. “Ohmigod!” chimes a group of teenage girls, on learning that they are standing in the world's first true shopping mall. “That is the coolest thing anybody has said to us all day.”

In the past half century Southdale and its many imitators have transformed shopping habits, urban economies and teenage speech. America now has some 1,100 enclosed shopping malls, according to the International Council of Shopping Centres. Clones have appeared from Chennai to Martinique. Yet the mall's story is far from triumphal. Invented by a European socialist who hated cars and came to deride his own creation, it has a murky future. While malls continue to multiply outside America, they are gradually dying in the country that pioneered them. …


Comments

2 responses to “Birth, death and shopping”

  1. One of the malls here in Dayton experienced this very thing, where the local community declined, real estate went down and the quality of customers basically hit rock bottom for the stores, so as big names moved out, like Sears and others, libraries, police and other no-name stores moved in, which meant that the owners of the mall paid more the maintain the building than they brought in revenues so they tore the mall down.

  2. Thirty years ago the Kansas City area had at least nine vibrant indoor malls. (A tenth has been added.) Today, two have been demolished. KC government as about to take action to demolish a third one. Two more are virtually vacant. Only three are fully occupied and vibrant.

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