Malls Weren't Supposed to be Like This

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • Victor Gruen is considered the father of shopping malls, but he envisioned something more than shopping centers surrounded by asphalt parking lots.
    Timestamps:
    0:00 The Car Centric Shopping Experience
    3:30 Purpose of a Mall
    6:00 The Gruen Effect
    7:09 Victor Gruen & Suburbia
    11:22 Southdale Center
    12:42 A Tragic Downgrading in Quality
    14:29 The Golden Age of the Mall
    15:20 Malls Are Dying
    17:02 Chance for New Life
    20:17 Leave Downtown, Downtown
    Sources:
    Mall Maker Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream
    archive.org/details/mallmaker...
    SouthTowne Crossing Commercial:
    www.shopsouthtownecrossing.com/
    Vehicle Trips By Purpose
    nhts.ornl.gov/vehicle-trips
    Mall Walkers of Meadowood Mall
    mynews4.com/news/local/meet-t...
    How Ikea mastered the Gruen effect
    www.vox.com/2018/10/17/179896...
    Customer Impulse Purchasing Behavior
    www.jstor.org/stable/3150160
    Impact of ambient odors on mall shoppers' emotions, cognition, and spending
    www.academia.edu/15579860/Imp...
    Why the inventor of the shopping mall denounced his dream
    www.theguardian.com/artanddes...
    Southdale Center: America's first shopping mall
    www.theguardian.com/cities/20...
    www.gruenassociates.com/proje...
    Father of shopping centers disowns his progeny
    www.newspapers.com/image/2229...
    America's Suburban Experiment
    www.strongtowns.org/curbside-...
    This Man Is the Father of Modern American Suburbia
    • This Man Is the Father...
    Victor Gruen Wanted to Make Our Suburbs More Urban. Instead, He Invented the Mall
    www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
    Southdale, the World's First Shopping Mall, Celebrates 60 Years
    www.minnesotamonthly.com/arts...
    Weather-Conditioned Shopping Center Opens
    timesmachine.nytimes.com/time...
    Nov. 28, 1956: Frank Lloyd Wright at Southdale
    www.startribune.com/nov-28-19...
    The rise and fall of the American mall
    www.businessinsider.com/the-r...
    Malls are dying. The thriving ones are spending millions to reinvent themselves.
    www.washingtonpost.com/busine...
    25% of U.S. malls are expected to shut within 5 years.
    www.cnbc.com/2020/08/27/25per...
    Reno Entertainment District
    redreno.com/

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @ahabitria
    @ahabitria Год назад +1733

    It's nice to see a different perspective on malls as civic spaces. In the Philippines and in many Southeast Asian countries, malls are not dying, they're thriving. They are a one-stop shop. They have clothing stores, hardware, grocery, pharmacy, churches, exhibition centers, cinemas, restaurants, gardens, banks, office spaces, and more. In contrast to American Malls, Southeast Asian malls also double as transit hubs. Malls here do serve as third places, because of lack of open space, and the want to escape the heat of the tropics. And you can spend the whole day without buying anything inside the malls here.

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +127

      Malls in the US were doing okay until the late 1990s. E-Commerce really killed them. Also, there were just *way* too many malls built in the 80s and 90s (the US has an insane amount of retail space per capita compared to any other country). They were built on tax credits and started poaching each other's business. A new mall would open and stores and customers would move to that one, leaving a blighted mall behind. Mall owners also became more aware of how expensive they were to maintain compared to traditional shopping centers. The rise of free-standing "big box" stores like Walmart, Target, Costco, Sam's Club, etc. really cut into their business as well. Some malls are doing fine, others are just getting by, and many are failing, being torn down and redeveloped into outdoor "lifestyle centers" or into new housing developments.
      Malls in the US will often fight against having a transit stop there (at least they used to) because they think it will bring an "undesirable element" to the mall. With some exceptions, they are meant to be accessed by people in cars, period.

    • @ahabitria
      @ahabitria Год назад +63

      @Zaydan Alfariz there's a shift in what people do in malls, especially during and after the pandemic. The mall nearest me replaced some of its cinemas to more restaurant spaces. Some stores have closed and are yet to be replaced, but business is picking up after loosened restrictions.
      E-commerce does have its merits, but we cannot deny that malls here in SE Asia provide a different purpose to people compared to its American counterparts, thus making it more resilient to changing times.

    • @junirenjana
      @junirenjana Год назад +69

      @Zaydan Alfariz Malls that are "dying" in Jakarta are those that generally don't offer other experience than shopping tho, so it's still more or less the same as the reason why malls in the US are dying. But if you've been to an American mall, the difference to SEA mall is about the difference between heavens and earth lol. Malls in the US are generally suburban with huge parking lots, very spread out (like, only one or two storeys but wide enough that you have to visit different parts by car), and offer very little entertainment than shopping.

    • @junirenjana
      @junirenjana Год назад +35

      Also dense residential area around (or even on top of) malls are very common in SEA, ensuring that the malls will always have regular customers. One in my city is surrounded by dozens of public housing buildings.

    • @realemperorkuzco
      @realemperorkuzco Год назад +15

      Yea, like every "city" in the Ph has at least one mall, and of course there is MOA.

  • @skitlus335
    @skitlus335 Год назад +587

    US malls don't have grocery shops? That's freaking dumb. Never seen a mall without at least one grocery shop in any other country I've been to.

    • @MrJamieBattle
      @MrJamieBattle Год назад +92

      It’s very rare in the USA to have a grocery store. I even count Target and Walmarts as grocery stores if they’re in a mall. There are a couple wegmans in malls too. Some have Costco’s included as well

    • @skitlus335
      @skitlus335 Год назад +80

      @@MrJamieBattle That's sad. IMO the strongest selling point of shopping centers is that they can concentrate multiple categories of shops in one easily available spot, so it's absurd to hear that they regularly lack the most essential shop there is.
      When I visit one of the shopping centres near my home (all accessible by public transport and on foot, naturally), we usually end the trip with a stop at one of the supermarkets there so I don't have to spend time going somewhere else afterwards.

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +61

      Usually, they don't. I don't think I've ever seen a grocery store in a US mall. They're mostly dominated (I'd say 90%) by clothing/apparel stores with some "specialty stores" that sell things like electronics, kitchenware, gifts, and novelties, with a few restaurants and snack places.

    • @skitlus335
      @skitlus335 Год назад +28

      @@danielkelly2210 of course, in the countries I've been to it's also the norm that the center is dominated by clothing shops and the occasional hardware, interior or electronics shop, but supermarkets are basically compulsory. My nearest shopping center right now has two supermarkets, and yet another two across the (one-lane w/ bike path) street next to it. :D
      Whoever plans this stuff in the US has a lot to learn if they want to make people happy to be there.

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +40

      @@skitlus335 I won't pretend to know why this isn't the case in the US, but it just isn't. Though I have a few ideas... one is Americans have been conditioned to buy huge amounts of groceries at once. The typical US grocery store is located in a strip mall or power center. Loading all those groceries is easier if you can just drive right up to the front or wheel your cart out to your car, something you can't do in an enclosed mall.

  • @pacificostudios
    @pacificostudios Год назад +469

    When light rail transit was built from Minneapolis to Bloomington in 2004 or so, Mall of America was adamantly against having a train station next to the Mall. They relented when 1) they saw how many people were crossing the street to enter from the mall from the train station, and 2) they finally realized that most of their customers were coming from south Minneapolis, Richfield, and Bloomington, because they could not compete with malls deeper in suburbia. Ten years later, the line was extended to provide easy access to the mall. Now thanks to a 2019 renovation, the train stops under the mall, and it is so easy to get to the mall, many people take the train from MSP airport to the Mall when they have a long layover. There's a real lesson in the potential for malls to benefit from rail transit.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Год назад +14

      I like the Minneapolis light rail system, and wouldn't go to a Twins game any other way (I park at Ft. Snelling). But when the light rail was connected from downtown to MOA, crime at MOA increased (to include shootings and even murders). I don't know of an easy answer to the problem, but if people don't feel a space is safe, they won't go there.

    • @pacificostudios
      @pacificostudios Год назад +46

      @@Gail1Marie - That's a bit like blaming the divorce rate on the introduction of microwave ovens into American homes. It's been scientifically proven that as soon as people started using microwaves in American homes in the 1970s, more married couples started getting divorced. You can't argue with the statistics!

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Год назад +5

      @@pacificostudios So what's your explanation for the increase in shootings at MOA? I can't remember a single one before the light rail was connected. Why did MOA have to institute rules requiring teens to have adult chaperones, and limit the number of teens who can congregate together? If you don't have access to a car, how do you think you got to MOA?

    • @pacificostudios
      @pacificostudios Год назад +6

      @@Gail1Marie Ask someone that cares about your opinions.

    • @Hafiere
      @Hafiere Год назад +33

      @@Gail1Marie I think that's more correlation than causation. Since there are more people in a given place due to easier access via the light rail, there's simply more people that could commit crime. It would be more interesting if the crime rate per visitor increased with the access to light rail. Shootings, meanwhile, seem like a mostly american thing that is drawn to any place with a large concentration of people, like a successful mall, a school, or a nightclub.
      As far as I'm aware, the malls in my country don't have the same crime and violence issue as in the U.S. Maybe because all the entrances have guards posted to search for banned items, like firearms. Ditto on the train stations having x-ray scanners plus the guards.

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 Год назад +647

    One of the villains is zoning. Most areas segregate land uses, so places to live, work and shop are separated. We need mixed use zoning, so that people can walk to shop and walk to work and won't necessarily need to use a car. I have thought that a dying mall could modify inactive wings for senior or affordable housing. As a retired senior, I'd love to be able to walk out my door into a controlled-climate "street" to do my shopping and to socialize. But present laws in many places don't permit that.

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Год назад +45

      Think alot of people do want atleast 1 pub within walking distance...
      Long as it isn't a weatherspoons.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Год назад +57

      @@davidty2006 In St. Paul, Minnesota, in neighborhoods built in the 1920s before everyone had a car, bars (pubs) were allowed on many corners. One of our friends lived next door to one. The kids would build a snowman around the fire hydrant in front of their house, knowing some drunk wandering out of the bar would kick it over (and probably break his foot!)

    • @NineInchTyrone
      @NineInchTyrone Год назад +5

      Excellent idea

    • @Jacksparrow4986
      @Jacksparrow4986 Год назад +5

      That sounds awful. Maybe if you live in the desert and it's regularly over 30°C that would be the way to go but why live in the desert? You are replicating the suburbanite idea of always beeing in a climate-controlled box which sounds nice and comfy, but it is bad for you. No experiencing of seasons lead to a disconnect and your comfort zone will shrink towards a very small box.

    • @Bobrogers99
      @Bobrogers99 Год назад +32

      @@Jacksparrow4986 You're correct if you confine yourself to the climate-controlled box. But especially for older folks, there are many days when it's too hot or too cold (or raining or snowing) to walk outdoors. In the winter in New England it's often too icy underfoot to walk safely.

  • @Hawxxfan
    @Hawxxfan Год назад +467

    5:00 I can't believe someone would be genuinely surprised by how healthy they could be (at any age) after walking every day. It's so sad how our infrastructure and health are physically intertwined for the worse in this country

    • @MustraOrdo
      @MustraOrdo Год назад +52

      I don't think the petrol and pharmaceutical industries are sad about this intentional design.

    • @JAM661
      @JAM661 Год назад +9

      If you want to walk then do it. But blaming design of store for people lack of exercise is stupid. Meanwhile most people do not live within walking distance to most store unless they live in a city. Or is there suppose to have store every block so people can walk to them.
      Meanwhile if you have problems with the design go complain to the city council who approve this stuff. Oh yea people never show up for that or even show up to vote for the people who make the choices that effect them the most. Which is your city, country and state elected officials and not the one in Washington DC. If American want to complain maybe they should understand the system and how it works. It is like people whining about corporations and yet those are business you could be a part owner of just by buying the stock and be part of the profits or loses.

    • @caseymurray7722
      @caseymurray7722 Год назад

      @@JAM661 It's extremely hard to unfuck 70 years of shitty city design. In a properly designed society you do not have to own a personal means of transportation to survive. Most people don't live in walking distance to a store because it's illegal to build anything other than single family housing in most areas and the stores don't coexist alongside housing. If you had a community design that allows walking as a means of transport people would walk. If your life is like the majority of Americans the most walking done in a week is to and from a car.
      Again this was decided as car sales took off decades ago and the infrastructure is already in place. Similar to internet, since companies own cable lines they can have monopolies and jack prices. Ideally the lines would be government owned just like electricity and competition would actually exist.
      Sure if thigs were just getting started a vote would do something. That's why so many young people are frustrated because they have to deal with the ignorance of the past without any means to make a meaningful difference within their own lives. Just because you have a vote or have a dollar to spend doesn't mean that one person will make an impact. It takes a majority and a fair system which we don't currently have.

    • @spiritualanarchist8162
      @spiritualanarchist8162 Год назад +32

      It's a bit ironic how these elderly people drive to a mall to have a walk. I just realize how losing one's licence must be hell for the average elderly American ! . My father had to give uo his licence age 82, because he couldn't pass the tests anymore . Luckily he can bike , walk and take public transport. Otherwise he would be stuck .Or maybe the U.S is more lenient about testing old drivers ?

    • @katie7748
      @katie7748 Год назад

      ​@@JAM661couldn't agree more

  • @zilsenoj5129
    @zilsenoj5129 Год назад +493

    As a kid, I've always loved the idea of living in a mall, and so do many others. Malls have lots of potential, developers just don't like taking risks. If you actually fleshed out Gruen's idea, you'd have an indoor downtown with residential spaces, shops, medical facilities, etc. These large concrete shells exist everywhere. What if we kept the storefronts and turned the rest of the empty big boxes into housing? Then expand by eating away at the massive parking lots. Provide a transit link directly to downtown. Now, you've built an indoor car-independent suburb. Perfect for a place like Tucson with a hot climate. But we should flesh out Victor Gruen's idea, the world deserves to see at least one example of what could have been.

    • @sesamestreetfriendsbarneyb3098
      @sesamestreetfriendsbarneyb3098 Год назад +41

      Same i wanted to live in a mall to like the stores at the second floor could be apartments. also some malls in asia have train systems in them bc they are really big

    • @Sicakasot
      @Sicakasot Год назад +42

      😮 I never thought of it like that! It sounds like a futuristic city and it's sad that the decisions made in the 1950s took that future away from us. The developers knew what they were doing when they shutdown Victor's idea. I agree lets bring it on

    • @fredashay
      @fredashay Год назад

      I believe that's called an "arcology" where people live in a single ginormous monolithic building that contains apartments, retail shops, restaurants, bars, schools, hospital, recreational facilities with a pool and playground, a small sports complex with bowling and tennis and volleyball, corporate offices, professional services, etc. Sure, you're still gonna want to leave and travel to visit friends and relatives or just go shopping somewhere else once in a while, so you're still gonna need to own a car (and there's nothing wrong with that -- it's called freedom and convenience created by technological progress)
      If done right, it sounds ideal.
      But if done wrong, it could become a authoritarian communist slum.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Год назад +24

      His original vision was actually more akin to the life style center, but he was never able to make it correctly. He honestly should’ve work with Disney to design the mall as he had the same ultimate vision as Walt.

    • @retroryan838
      @retroryan838 Год назад +15

      That’s an interesting idea. You could turn an empty department store into housing by putting up new walls in it. No pointless demolition and it pays respect to the mall.

  • @herlescraft
    @herlescraft Год назад +195

    I like the difference between American malls and the Italian ones. In Italy malls usually comprise of a bunch of smaller shop usually orbiting a large grocery super market placed at the center of the building

    • @PotatoSmasher420
      @PotatoSmasher420 Год назад +6

      Same in Czech republic. Typical layout is a supermarket downstairs, small shops above, food court and cinema in the highest. And no gigantic parking lot. Either a multilevel garage at the outskirts of the city, or no garage at all in the city center (use public transport.).

    • @NavaSDMB
      @NavaSDMB Год назад +4

      They're the same in Spain; some supermarkets even have specific satellites so you know that if a mall's anchor is a Misupermercado there will be a Mismascotas and a Misgafas (names invented).
      And I assume that, in Italy as in Spain, if they're not in a walkable location they've got public transportation.

    • @myra0224
      @myra0224 Год назад +4

      I think it's something we in Europe did right, as it's the same in Belgium as well. I'm glad we don't have those monstrosities as in the US, but actually useful spaces during hot summer days or when it's raining so you can still go out and be shielded from the weather

    • @AdmiralBison
      @AdmiralBison Год назад +2

      so going by the posts, the common thing it seems.
      Smaller stores, more community and land is more efficiently used with a positive emphasis and impact on the human condition.
      i.e. people are not treated as consumer automatons to serve mega corporations and their shareholders.
      There is more to life than just feeding the Capitalist machine and the 1% rich who sit on top of it.

    • @eazydee5757
      @eazydee5757 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@PotatoSmasher420It’s like that in Thailand as well.

  • @caseymurray7722
    @caseymurray7722 Год назад +101

    It's very easy to fix the aspect of malls dying. Have them serve as a transit hub and offer more business than mainly clothing. Having a grocery store, barber shops, recreational facilities, etc, would bring in so much more people. Malls are like 80 percent clothing versus one small street downtown that has restaurants, candy shops, a bank, and even a rock climbing gym.
    This diversity only works when there's a way to get there other than by car though.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Год назад +9

      I definitely think any major mall in town should be served by atleast 1 quality transit line, and possibly even be a hub for the system.
      They could even serve as an anchor to the system in smaller cities.

    • @caseymurray7722
      @caseymurray7722 Год назад +11

      @@jasonreed7522 We need better transit it general. Utilizing and expanding our current rail lines would drastically improve everything. My small hometown has an Amtrak line running right through it but no stop. My college has a freight line running right through it but no passenger rail. They're rapidly expanding and have a parking problem already. Rail is a great way to connect these smaller areas. Especially in areas where highway expansions killed business.

    • @jimsteele9261
      @jimsteele9261 Год назад +3

      When I lived in Flint, the local mall did have a grocery store. I didn't much care for it. When buying groceries, you want to load up the car and head for home, so you could unload the frozen and refridgerated goods right away. So you had to go to the mall stores first then the grocery, maybe even moving the car in the process. The notion of hauling a couple weeks worth of groceries home on a bus or train is ridiculous, as is going to the store every couple days to restock.
      Those of us who live in the burbs like it, in spite of what urban snobs may think. Those big parking lots are NOT built for cars, they're built for PEOPLE who use cars. Save us all from fools who try to tell us how we should live. :-)

    • @caseymurray7722
      @caseymurray7722 Год назад +4

      @@jimsteele9261 Going to the store every couple days for groceries that you can actually carry back isn't ridiculous. When you have to drive or commute far to a store it is. Suburbs suck for any public transportation so I can see how it would be awful there. If you have say a grocery store in waking distance from your house isn't not a chore but again suburbs cause spread and less density means car dependent travel. Cars as a means of transport are almost the most inefficient system you can create. The issue is the way our housing has been built destroys any hope of usable transit because of needing a bus to get you home from airports/rail and needing to get from a bus stop to your house. Suburbs kills all walkability which destroys both commerce of the area too. Urban areas have both business and housing while rural areas do as well. Suburbs are a block of land used incredibly poorly to house people. I do not see any single reason why they exist other than to create redlining and separation of races or to pander to the falsity of both a personal property and cooperative community in one area.

    • @johnjohnX90
      @johnjohnX90 Год назад

      This is the case here in the Philippines, or atleast in Metro Manila, a car-centric city. Malls here are intertwined with public transit, so much so that one of the main train lines, the MRT, has malls on almost every station. A lot of the malls here almost always have everything you would need, from salons, to groceries/supermarkets, to clothing/retail shops, cinemas, even bowling alleys, which makes it a third space for a lot of families, workers, couples etc., especially those without cars that couldn't access parks and green spaces outside the metro.

  • @christiankevinmunoz4805
    @christiankevinmunoz4805 Год назад +167

    Malls have become a desolate wasteland and the parking lots are 2/3 empty. What a terrible waste of space.

    • @KoroWerks
      @KoroWerks Год назад +18

      The parking lots are 2/3rds empty on Black Friday.

    • @carstarsarstenstesenn
      @carstarsarstenstesenn Год назад +18

      way more than 2/3 empty. parking lots are designed for what used to be maximum capacity on black friday but these days there's less in person shoppers even on black friday.

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam Год назад +15

      They weren't so empty when they were built. Today, they've been replaced by the internet, and cheaper free standing locations. I agree they should've been knocked down and rezoned more than a decade ago, but the investment groups that own them would rather leave them rotting than spend any money on them. (and no one is going to pay what they think they used to be worth, because the building sitting on it is beyond worthless -- a great deal of money will be required to remove it.)

    • @thetrainguy1
      @thetrainguy1 Год назад +8

      I say tear them down and build a park.

    • @anubizz3
      @anubizz3 Год назад +2

      How about small bikable shopping distinct?

  • @edselgreaves6503
    @edselgreaves6503 Год назад +164

    I live in Asia and they refuse to build malls anymore unless they can attach a condo and/or office spaces along with it to guarantee foot traffic. The area I was living in during the pandemic lockdowns had a mall, apartment, park, lake, and hospital right next to it for people to easily access. Such good infrastructure.

    • @mananshah9015
      @mananshah9015 Год назад +2

      hmm i live in asia and ive not seen the office rule atleast in the country i live. where are you from?

    • @edselgreaves6503
      @edselgreaves6503 Год назад +3

      @@mananshah9015 Malaysia

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Год назад +1

      Most new malls in the US are like that. They are mixed-use. One area of the property has apartments. This video is looking at malls built in the 1970's. Much has changed since then.

    • @HrHaakon
      @HrHaakon Год назад +1

      In Norway, they're often built around transit hubs.
      So if you're in say, Bergen West, your local hub is going to be Loddefjord, which again connects you to other places. Which means that you're going to pass by that place anyway, so you're pretty much guaranteed to have a bunch of people showing up on the mall anyway. They also offer park&ride parking out of the goodness of their hearts, and definitively not because it means more people will stop by the mall.
      The mall also have stuff like the library, social services, etc. attached, so you have plenty of reasons for stopping by.
      Those malls are not going under anytime soon, but they're also not quite as large as the US ones. They're more like a small bet on the future that paid off, and then they've been added to, or removed from until it grows into the size that works. Kind of a Strong Malls approach I guess?

    • @jivanjovan
      @jivanjovan Год назад

      ​​@@mananshah9015 Well these types of malls are almost a given in new (90s onwards) developments throughout Southeast Asia. Expensive apartments pride themselves in having direct access to a prestigious mall and vice versa. Hotels and offices are common attachments as well. Every mall strives to be the most luxurious as possible to outcompete each other and that coincides with development of other amenities, as well as hiding parking lots underground as much as possible to show off their glitzy facade.
      ~Jakarta

  • @mdhazeldine
    @mdhazeldine Год назад +194

    I don't think malls are 100% bad. I like the fact that they're walkable and being indoors in a climate controlled environment is great if it's really cold or really hot outside. I also quite like the fact that some of them have play areas for kids, food courts, fountains, trees etc. They're especially good when they're in a city centre and have good transit access, plus entertainment options like cinemas nearby. What I dislike is when they're on the edge of town and your only way to get there is by car and the huge car parks surrounding them (making them look ugly on the outside). I also dislike the privately owned nature of them, with private security guards walking around making sure you're not misbehaving. It would be great to have a covered shopping area in a downtown with all of that stuff, but that's publicly owned, where citizens have the same rights as on a public street. Places like this do exist in Europe and the UK, but not many of them are truly publicly owned unfortunately.

    • @Andreamom001
      @Andreamom001 Год назад +7

      I've heard malls are a good place to play Pokemon Go. In winter, I drive around to play. Being able to walk around a mall would be nice. No malls near enough to me, though.

    • @docvideo93
      @docvideo93 Год назад +4

      Excellent point! My college town had a mall anchoring the downtown. You could park at the mall, walk through and shop at the mall, and popped out the back onto Main Street and do more shopping.

    • @bonniemoerdyk9809
      @bonniemoerdyk9809 Год назад

      @@docvideo93 ... sounds like the one in Urbana IL, there was also a large hotel w/a castle theme. The restaurant opened onto the mall, and could be used by all. Not sure it still exists, last time I was there around 2000-2005, it was dying then.😥

    • @ChasmChaos
      @ChasmChaos Год назад +1

      Oxford's Covered Market comes to mind. Or NYC's Chelsea Market. Or London's Spitalfields Market.

    • @Nempo13
      @Nempo13 Год назад

      All stores are privately owned. Every single store you have ever entered is privately owned, can have security guards (many do) and can toss you out for literally any reason they want. This belief that stores have to be open for everyone is some weird brain gymnastics certain demographics have began thinking...which is why so many stores are shutting down now. Thieves and those who want to defame and damage at random need to be kept out of stores. Those stores on the public street can toss you out just as quickly as well.
      The security guards making sure you aren't misbehaving, are doing what police should be doing everywhere else. In small towns you see police walking the main areas just like a security guard walks in a mall. To stop people from misbehaving. If security/police are visible and seen being active it keeps miscreants from doing things and they move on to easier targets.
      Why do you hate the privately owned nature of them? You have never had to work for, or work with the government have you? Private industry does in a day what takes the government a week or two. This is not an exaggeration. If we privatized more of what our government controls in a vice grip, things would happen faster while being both safer and more efficient/user friendly.

  • @humanecities
    @humanecities Год назад +24

    21:03 I was thinking “That street doesn’t look tooooo bad…” And then it zoomed out… 😢

  • @recyclespinning9839
    @recyclespinning9839 Год назад +240

    Malls had a fatal flaw. The rent is only affordable for big corporations. The average person can't open up a business there. The suburban sprawl is just built into the design that was already there.

    • @supertuber120
      @supertuber120 Год назад +47

      Yeah, years ago a friend of mine wanted to open a kiosk at a mall. But it never happened cause it turned out rent would've been $10,000/month! I'm not even talking about a store. This is just one of those little kiosks in the walkway between the stores.

    • @yuki-sakurakawa
      @yuki-sakurakawa Год назад +26

      Wonder how these kiosks could do this. Never see anybody really buy anything from them...but yet they are still there.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Год назад +23

      It depends. When a mall starts to lose its anchor stores, the rent on smaller units can drop significantly. Our local mall now has four spaces rented to a non-chain furniture store, plus boutique-type non-chain stores like a candy store, costume jewelry store, wig store, and boot store. That's one of the signs that a mall is in trouble, in fact--lots of mom-and-pop stores replacing national chains. (We lost our Sears three years ago and our Forever 21 shortly thereafter.)

    • @kathleenchilcote9127
      @kathleenchilcote9127 Год назад +5

      @@Gail1Marie our mall starting losing big box stores then whole sections were shut down. We list bigger box anchor stores ..now it's closed and being torn down.

    • @bonniemoerdyk9809
      @bonniemoerdyk9809 Год назад +5

      Yes! You're so right! Also, if for some reason a store has to open a little late because the key-holder didn't make it there on time (car wreck, blizzard, ect.), they are fined, very heavily I might add. If a store decides to not open on a Sunday for instance, they pay a hefty fine each week for that. Also in the contract between the store and the Mall, every 5-10 years a store must do a complete remodel/face-lift to bring it up to the latest trends in design! ... which can be a financial disaster to a mom & pop store.

  • @jessebowen1879
    @jessebowen1879 Год назад +27

    I've seen my local mall get rid of the "hangout " aspect. They stopped the mall walkers, teens aka mall rats . And the movie theater, arcade.. guess what? They lost all the regular customers they had... people want more then the gap and Macy's.. malls are committing retailing suicide

    • @dmandman9
      @dmandman9 Год назад +8

      They even got rid of things like the fountains where people used to gather and socialize while their spouse or parents shopped. Now the only seating is in the food court. Even the food court seating is just for eating, not socializing.

  • @nimeshinlosangeles
    @nimeshinlosangeles Год назад +107

    That was very insightful at 9:25 that the suburban lifestyle makes it tempting to just reconstruct the world in your own home - because it's such a pain in the ass to get out into the world if you have to drive everywhere.

    • @Nico_M.
      @Nico_M. Год назад +24

      And this is one of the reasons Americans want bigger and bigger houses. In dense walkable places with plenty of third places, there are times when you feel that your home is just the place you store your things, because you spend so much time outside of it that only go back to sleep.

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam Год назад +1

      @@Nico_M. A big house is a status symbol. But, yes, over time, people tend to fill the space they have. As for the "man cave", we built it out of convenience (it's there, and we can use it as much as we want, whenever we want), and stumble into it's economy (it quickly pays for itself given the cost of a movie ticket, bowling/pool/arcade, night at the bar, ...)

    • @anubizz3
      @anubizz3 Год назад

      Hmm I wonder why all my University friend, move to this depressing suburb area with big house once we start having children? We used to live in 15min city with bike line and just 12 km from CBD....... I am still living in the same neighborhood. the reason I still live in this area not because its bike-able but because its public transport and I love beach. but if we have second one there is no question we will move to that depressing suburb you hate so much. because we know in reality as long as there is good public transport their live not much worse than us.

    • @CrAzYnAdEz
      @CrAzYnAdEz Год назад +5

      I personally love driving. Especially since I have a nice car which I enjoy. I agree that it can be a pain in the ass to get out into the world if you have to drive everywhere but when I lived in the city I thought it was even worse to have to rely on busses and trains all the time. You have to go by their schedule, pay every time you ride them, they are usually crowded and you may have to stand, they still require masks in most cities, etc. In the winter when there is a snowstorm and I'm nice and warm in my car I always feel bad for the people at bus stops standing in the cold all the time. I knowsome urbanists love that lifestyle but it's not for me.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Год назад +5

      @@jfbeam My husband and I bought a 1,550-square-foot house and have resisted the temptation to move into a larger one. We'd only get MORE junk if we did. Instead, we paid down the principal on this house and had it paid off in 13 years. Is it a little small? Yes. But I'd rather be mortgage-free.

  • @JH-pe3ro
    @JH-pe3ro Год назад +97

    Since I've been playing Cities Skylines lately, my kneejerk response to suburban problems is now "Robert Moses gone urbanist": as soon as a problem arises, you have an excuse to bulldoze everything in the area around the problem and put in a completely re-envisioned district with more efficient land use, a better transit corridor and protected bike paths.
    The silver lining of dead malls is that actually, it's possible to do that with the site without displacement. (You'd have to also bulldoze the whole adjacent stroad to get the transit in, though, which might be harder.)

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Год назад +16

      I recently had a realization that some of the largest malls could probably have a transit stop in the basement and sell off or otherwise redevelop the oversized parkinglot.
      But yes, abandoned malls are ideal places to redevelop because its a massive lot with nobody living on it.

    • @nlpnt
      @nlpnt Год назад +8

      You could just narrow the street and use the rest of the stroad's width for transit. Start with BRT and you could do that with paint.

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam Год назад +10

      Too bad the real world isn't as simple as the swipe of a mouse in a video game. How many millions did you spend on permits? How long did you have to want for them? How many millions more poured into "hazmat" clean up? (some malls will be old enough to have asbestos in them.)

    • @Amir-jn5mo
      @Amir-jn5mo Год назад +1

      Amen brother. I'm sitting at a 50k city currently and the widest road i have is a 4 way one way road in industrial complex. All my residential, commercial and downtown areas are two lane trams or roads with bike lane. No traffic issues whatsoever.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Год назад +4

      This is why California and several other states are saying that all malls should include housing. It’s easier to add density to an empty lot.

  • @humanecities
    @humanecities Год назад +140

    I had to run some errands the other day, and the best tool for the job happened to be a car. Once I parked, I had to walk soooo far from shop to shop that I seriously considered driving to the other parking lot. Some of these places are quite dystopian. Walkable streets are great for everyone, even if you happened to have driven there.

    • @ethancrisp3491
      @ethancrisp3491 Год назад +15

      Even if the next store i need is in the same parking lot i will just drive over there and park closer. There are rarely good spots to walk from store to store and I dont want to walk across an entire parking lot.

    • @humanecities
      @humanecities Год назад +11

      @@ethancrisp3491 Parking lots impermeable for both pedestrians and water!

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam Год назад +1

      @@humanecities Not necessarily. There are permeable pavements. ('tho few will pay for them)

    • @humanecities
      @humanecities Год назад

      @@jfbeam oh! I’ve not heard of these. Do you have any I can look up to learn more about?

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam Год назад +1

      @@humanecities You're on a Google property, so I assume you know how to use Google. (Practical Engineer made a video about it about 2 years ago)

  • @IronmanLIIII0
    @IronmanLIIII0 Год назад +56

    I moved to the Philippines a year ago and the inner city malls here are a marvel to behold. Stretching several city blocks and as much as 10 or more floors these places are the heart and soul of major urban areas. These malls are serviced by well-developed inexpensive mass transit systems as well as cheap private cabs tricycles (motorcycles with enclosed side cars and Jeepneys (old, modified WWII jeeps stretched and converted to commuter buses). The malls contain most every American retailer plus many retailers unique to Asia swimming pools amusement rides and even church services are held in many malls.

    • @TOCC50
      @TOCC50 4 месяца назад

      America is one giant parking lot

  • @kjp8251
    @kjp8251 Год назад +8

    I'm so glad that lady's arteries are no longer blocked.

  • @TheStickCollector
    @TheStickCollector Год назад +22

    You can fit a mini transportation system inside the building.

    • @randgrithr7387
      @randgrithr7387 Год назад +4

      We can build stroads inside the mall!

    • @Humulator
      @Humulator Год назад +4

      Take of that roof, put some tram tracks in, put some trams in, turn the parking lot into houses, boom a walkable community!

  • @philinator71
    @philinator71 Год назад +54

    It's interesting seeing the fall of many malls in the US.
    It's a different story here in Australia. Shopping centres here are very popular and usually packed with people. A few shopping centres near me in fact all went through a multi million dollar renovation and expansion and they are still busy. Major shops here tend to contain everything from groceries, cinema, clothing retails, restaurants, optomotrists, entertainment specialty stores and more.
    It often seen as a destination and a one stop shop with public transport hubs near by.

    • @jarico_minecraft6637
      @jarico_minecraft6637 Год назад +3

      I think this is the best way to do malls

    • @Notverysupercoach
      @Notverysupercoach Год назад +2

      They also have parking lots in the biggest ones at least underground. And out of the way of all the pedestrians

  • @ffdave117
    @ffdave117 Год назад +22

    I was 16 in 1980.
    No internet, no cell phones, everyone was at the mall on the weekends. The parking lot was full.
    That same Mall in 2023 is completely different than it was in 1980. The good stores are gone and the parking lot is always empty.

    • @bchristian85
      @bchristian85 7 месяцев назад +4

      It's not just online shopping. It's the evaporating middle class. High-end malls are doing well. The middle class malls, the ones we all loved as teenagers (if you were born pre-2000), are the ones disappearing. Another factor is they built far too many of them, especially during the 2000s. The retail boom was out of control for the few years before the 2008 recession happened.

    • @charlesrodriguez7984
      @charlesrodriguez7984 5 месяцев назад

      @@bchristian85i think these dead malls can be turned into proper walkable cities within cities.

  • @NavaSDMB
    @NavaSDMB Год назад +4

    An American friend and his Scottish wife made the specific choice to _not_ get a pool. Years after they moved into that house, people still wondered "but... you don't have a pool?" "Nope." "But, but, but..."
    Instead, they'd left their yards open; they were just grass, with some items that could be installed when the weather invited (a high net, a swing set...). Their yard was the suburb's public playground and, as he liked to say, "my children have 173 pools to choose from".

  • @PowerSynopsis
    @PowerSynopsis Год назад +13

    God, that shopping center looks like a miserable hell.

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Год назад +2

      Majority were built in the brutalist style.
      One in my town is one of them with only 1 bit that was a old building from 1902 that looks nice.

  • @atm1947
    @atm1947 Год назад +99

    There’s a lot of malls in the US that are very bizarrely placed that have a lot of potential. In my hometown (south of San Francisco), there’s a dying mall that sits right on top of a metro station and is a 5 minute walk from the local passenger heavy rail station. It would be the perfect place to build dense housing alongside limited commercial and civic spaces.
    Unfortunately, the mall and it’s land is currently expected to be bought by a biotech company which hopes to make it a corporate campus. It’s likely to be primarily focused on research, with paltry levels of residential and commercial areas.

    • @zilsenoj5129
      @zilsenoj5129 Год назад +15

      Lots of malls were built up to take advantage of tax credits, and then sold off. Cincinnati actually had like 26 malls at one point because of this.

    • @empirestate8791
      @empirestate8791 Год назад +11

      Seems like a good opportunity for a massive mixed-use development with housing, retail, and even ample new offices for the biotech company.

    • @bootmii98
      @bootmii98 Год назад +9

      I already know you're talking about Tanforan. Fun fact: San Bruno Caltrain is an infill option for BART.

    • @empirestate8791
      @empirestate8791 Год назад +8

      @@bootmii98 I don't understand why they built the BART and Caltrain stations separately. Makes sense to have just made them one station. Transferring would be easier, and the San Bruno Caltrain station is much closer to San Bruno's downtown than the San Bruno BART. At least the Tanforan redevelopment will add a lot of density (commercial, residential, and office)!

    • @atm1947
      @atm1947 Год назад +3

      @@empirestate8791 that’s the stated objective, but I’m expecting it to become a large office park with commercial around the transit connections and limited dense housing. Having lived here for 20+ years, I’ve lost count how many times I’ve seen a tech company buy valuable land near transit connections, and still turn it into a soulless hellscape of asphalt and glass.

  • @richardkbreuer
    @richardkbreuer Год назад +46

    Sadly, here, in Vienna, Austria, we welcomed the shopping malls in the 1980s because America. Now, we have several malls in and around the city and one of the biggest in all of Europe. Victor Grün didn't see that coming, I guess. The clips from Vienna are taken in the inner city, which is really beautiful but it's mostly for tourists and rich people.

    • @idnwiw
      @idnwiw Год назад +2

      True, but there are little victories. Donauzentrum took down the parking garage in the back, probably not enough demand. And they had to retrofit a tram line and bike lane to Gewerbepark Stadlau as cars alone didn't bring in enough costumers

  • @brendaryan306
    @brendaryan306 Год назад +14

    A big part of the problem is the US is car-centric, not public transport. I like taking the bus to downtown Minneapolis for work but even better using the skyway system so I don't have to go out into the elements and deal with traffic/pedestrian lights during my lunch break to get some food, do errands, and shop. I feel safer than walking through a parking garage alone.

  • @Ascertivus
    @Ascertivus Год назад +11

    After hearing the story of Gruen's plan, I realized that he did one of the most American things I've ever heard: privatizing and capitalizing public spaces and communities. Fascinating.

  • @GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub
    @GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub Год назад +32

    It's incredible for how retail-oriented our economy and culture is, we absolutely suck at making it efficient, safe or fun. Sometimes the traffic within the nearest power center gets so backed up you're waiting for 20 minutes to get out, not to mention the stores are so far apart and there's no ped infrastructure integrated within the huge space that you'll probably end up driving from store to store, making the one-stop solution a travesty.

    • @bigfat4172
      @bigfat4172 Год назад

      Right? We are supposedly a hyper capitalist powerhouse and in a lot of ways we aren't even properly built for that.

  • @danielkelly2210
    @danielkelly2210 Год назад +40

    Whatever Gruen's intentions, it's hard to see the mall concept in the US ever ending in a different way than it did. Suburban sprawl development was in full swing, and while retailers liked the idea of malls they were going to be built in a suburban manner (in greenfield areas and surrounded by a sea of parking) that maximized their profitability (being 100% retail-centric).

    • @Doribi117
      @Doribi117 Год назад +3

      Sadly you are right, though I would love to imagine a world where the Gruen style of mall had succeeded, basically every mall being a small city in the middle of the suburbs.

    • @foxbodyblues6709
      @foxbodyblues6709 Год назад

      I still don’t understand why some think they have a right to tell others how/where to live.

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +4

      @@foxbodyblues6709 I know! It's amazing how many laws and policies in the US were passed to push us toward low-density suburban development. Fortunately, these policies are being reversed somewhat, so neighborhoods will be free to densify and will no longer be limited only to single-family residential.

    • @foxbodyblues6709
      @foxbodyblues6709 Год назад

      @@danielkelly2210 you’re still doing it and thinking it’s ok

    • @thebigmacd
      @thebigmacd Год назад +3

      @@foxbodyblues6709 if you are insinuating that more freedom means you are being forced to change, no logic will help you. The American zoning laws that create suburban sprawl are the least free in the world.

  • @jamesphillips2285
    @jamesphillips2285 Год назад +33

    "I just think it is silly that parking is free and abundant due to due to laws requiring it; while housing is not treated with the same level of priority to ensure that it is abundant and available to anyone who needs it." - 18:10

    • @Xenomorph-hb4zf
      @Xenomorph-hb4zf Год назад +4

      That's because laying asphalt is easier and faster than building houses.

    • @jeanetteshawredden5643
      @jeanetteshawredden5643 Год назад +1

      "Free abundant parking" is for the 'haves' who are wealthy enough to own a car - not the 'have nots' who are poor.

    • @Xenomorph-hb4zf
      @Xenomorph-hb4zf Год назад +5

      @@jeanetteshawredden5643 Owning a car doesn't make you a wealthy rich person. majority of cars don't cost 100k

    • @GbengaOguntuase
      @GbengaOguntuase Год назад

      I wonder what the justification would be to have a law requiring retailers to provide housing the same way they are required to provide parking.

    • @jamesphillips2285
      @jamesphillips2285 Год назад +1

      @@GbengaOguntuase For a "power center" or mall you could require enough apartments on-site to patronize the stores.
      Parking minimums take up a LOT of land.

  • @schabernack.
    @schabernack. Год назад +18

    from a German perspective, I never understood malls being portrayed as hang-out spots in most of the American teen-focused media I watched. I think a big aspect of it is how I was raised very critical of consumerism (is that a word?) by my parents. But also they are crowded, loud, always busy, there is no fresh air and funnily enough the commute is one of the most painful aspects of going to a mall in a city with a tram to go around town and have the ability to shop in the centre as well as other small stores everywhere. Suffice to say I would not survive in an even more car-dependant country. However, learning from the urbanist channels I watch about how little walkability there is in the US I understand now that people hang out there. I also noticed it being more atttactive to younger people here but I think mostly it's more about "seeing and being seen", you know getting a burger or a milkshake and walking around, gossiping, meeting people much more than shopping. I will have to admit though in winter or rainy days it's much more comfortable to shop in a mall than in the city centre!

    • @rkbelmont1138
      @rkbelmont1138 Год назад

      I agree. From Mexico City here. Our country suffers from the mall cancer as well

    • @sammymarrco2
      @sammymarrco2 9 месяцев назад +1

      young americans dont really go to the mall anymore the internet has taken over.

    • @FUGP72
      @FUGP72 5 месяцев назад

      The air is fresher in a mall than in a downtown area.

  • @tonywalters7298
    @tonywalters7298 Год назад +13

    And the trend of consolidation has left fewer players that can enter vacated space. I.e. when the only stores around are Walmart and Target, there is nothing else to take over the space.

  • @Supersquishyawesomeness
    @Supersquishyawesomeness Год назад +7

    This is interesting because since I started doordashing I’ve been exposed to some of the most bizarre subdivision/neighborhood experimental layouts. It seems like they have tried to make them have miniature town squares but there are never any people. Its weird and unnerving in many situations.

    • @Eternalskyy
      @Eternalskyy 9 месяцев назад

      Wow, lol where is that at/general area? It sounds so interesting.

  • @HarvestStore
    @HarvestStore Год назад +3

    I appreciate you, thank you for making content.

  • @tylerschoenhofen9458
    @tylerschoenhofen9458 Год назад +24

    I definitely agree with the overall sentiment but there’s actually a transit center at the Southside mall. I live in downtown Minneapolis and I just took the bus there to buy by new iPhone. It’s even BRT most of the way. I just figured I would point that out since you seem to think you need a car to get there. They also have two apartment complexes in the parking lot and a trail with a separated bike lane that connects it to more apartments,a large grocery store, a large park, and a variety of other things.

    • @lizcademy4809
      @lizcademy4809 Год назад

      I could have written this exact post, only I live in Uptown

    • @JAM661
      @JAM661 Год назад +3

      The Mall of America is a big hub for public transport. I volunteer at the Minneapolis Airport and we also get people who have long layovers who want to get to the mall of America. Well it is just one stop away on the train. But I live 6 miles away from the mall and rarely even go there except to visit a few store like LL beans or the computer store or something. But when I was a kid that is what your family did on Sunday was spend the day at the mall when the weather was bad. Well now kids are entertained by video and computer games, sport clubs and other activities. Basically nothing last forever. But I think all these horrible strip malls ruined our shopping centers.

    • @teleriferchnyfain
      @teleriferchnyfain Год назад

      There are transit centers in or near many urban malls

    • @frunokhan
      @frunokhan Год назад +1

      Remember, Minneapolis is part of a very small handful of relatively livable cities. Almost every other city is pretty much a suburban hell.

    • @lizcademy4809
      @lizcademy4809 Год назад +1

      @@frunokhan I've lived in both of American cities/suburbs. When I had my choice to move anywhere in the country, I chose Minneapolis. [I love cold and hate heat.]

  • @neenee0010
    @neenee0010 Год назад +5

    your videos are always so informative.... great work as usual

  • @stischer47
    @stischer47 Год назад +6

    When the first fully enclosed mall was built here in San Antonio in 1960, North Star Mall, it was truly a one-stop mall - grocery store, toy store, bakery, hardware store, etc. However, over time, it has become a series of stores selling the same items (primarily shoes).

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 Год назад

      I'd be interested to hear why that mix of businesses devolved to mostly shoe stores.

  • @forivall
    @forivall Год назад +13

    On the topic of grocery stores, luckily, the mall I recently went to, Canada's 2nd largest mall, now has 3 grocery stores, so its useful to visit every once in a while.

    • @forivall
      @forivall Год назад +5

      Oh, also, it has fantastic transit access, with an attached bus/metro station.

    • @user-vo9wd6tx6c
      @user-vo9wd6tx6c Год назад +2

      @@forivall I was just wondering if "transit oriented malls" existed in North America, thanks.

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion Год назад +1

      @@user-vo9wd6tx6c
      Most malls in this area have transit nearby, but I wouldn't call them transit oriented. One has a narrow corridor of walkways on either side of the main entry road and crosswalks over the main drag to a transit center. The other is an outdoor mall with a transit center within the grounds, but it's an island with almost no sidewalks between the busses and the stores. Unfortunate since the latter actually has grocery stores.

  • @dustyrusty75
    @dustyrusty75 Год назад +9

    Fun fact: the shopping centers with big box stores scattered around a giant parking crater are called "power centers".

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Год назад +2

      Here in Uk they are called retail parks.
      Guess Retail car parks would be slightly more fitting.

  • @RevStickleback
    @RevStickleback Год назад +8

    East Asia has quite a mall culture, and the things they build are massive, 8 or 9 floors of shopping, with maybe a cinema on top. The big difference is that many of them are built right in the city centre, not in the suburbs. Then again, few places do sprawling suburbs in quite the way the USA does.

    • @TommyTako
      @TommyTako Год назад +1

      I guess it's common in China,
      in Tokyo and Osaka, the malls are usually in the suburbs. In the central cities, the small grocery stores and supermarkets are more common.
      In the car-centric cities like Nagoya, the malls are more popular.

  • @kino_cinante
    @kino_cinante Год назад +5

    One thing I just noticed was that shops being right next to a sidewalk can offer really nice shade as you walk.

  • @MisterRorschach90
    @MisterRorschach90 Год назад +11

    They turned the older mall in my city into a giant office building with a food court for the employees. There are two other malls. One is always busy and will probably never shut down or be effected by the downfall of malls. The other is barely holding on. Years back it even banned kids under 18 from entering without parents or a legal guardian. That actually made me really mad because they had a theater there and I couldn’t go on dates their or see movies with my friends as a teen. And it’s ridiculous because most of the stores in the mall were teen focused. Hot topic. Skate shops. American eagle, gap, sports stores. All of it was for teens and kids except for stuff like dillards, jewelry shops, or perfume shops. The idea of the third place was out the window.

    • @ulovejai5297
      @ulovejai5297 Год назад

      Buffalo?

    • @FUGP72
      @FUGP72 5 месяцев назад

      It isn't ridiculous. Don't be mad at them. Be mad at the kids that caused trouble to cause that ban. They didn't do it all willy nilly just to piss you off. The last 2 1/2 generations were taught that the world revolves around you and you can do anything you want. Which, of course, brings a lot of troubling behavior. And ultra lefty policies of "Do whatever you want. No more bail! You will be free to go no matter what you do!" doesn't help either.

  • @StLouis-yu9iz
    @StLouis-yu9iz Год назад +2

    Love this! :]

  • @matthewharvey3556
    @matthewharvey3556 Год назад +4

    “Malls aren’t like a traditional downtowns… They don’t want teenagers to loiter.”
    Sure, because towns NEVER try to stop kids from loitering in the downtown area. 😂😂😂

  • @empirestate8791
    @empirestate8791 Год назад +9

    The redevelopment of SF's stonestown galleria mall is excellent. It's a car-centric mall that's going to be turned into a mixed-use new urbanist development by constructing new housing and retail on the parking lots. A massive new underground garage is going to be constructed to replace the lost surface parking. The new district will have open space, entertainment, retail, and housing - and the old mall will remain unchanged.

  • @georgeemil3618
    @georgeemil3618 Год назад +6

    Ironic how mall walkers have to drive there. It's probably too dangerous to walk to the mall from home.

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Год назад

      Atleast when it comes to the US.
      Europe and britain isn't as bad in some places.
      Metrocenter being a slight exception though it has busses and regional rail as alternatives.

  • @ketch_up
    @ketch_up Год назад

    Hey I really enjoyed this video, thanks for making it

  • @punkdigerati
    @punkdigerati Год назад +28

    If suburbanites understood the costs of maintenance for all the roads and spread out services, I think they would happily invite businesses in to help offset them. As is there is no impetus, as they've pushed all those costs to the city center they were so desperate to be away from.

  • @chrissolace
    @chrissolace Год назад +4

    I’ve lived in suburbia all my life and only recently gone to a urban shopping district. It was downtown, so traffic was terrible, and parking in a parking garage and walking to the shops was different (and worrying if we could find our car again), but once we got to the shops, we really enjoyed ourselves. There were outdoor parks to relax or play in, shops to buy clothes, places to eat, a movie theater. If we didn’t have an appointment later that day, we could’ve spent the whole day there relaxing (we spent most of the day there anyway). If there was one near where I lived, it easily could be a third place for me (many of my friends wish there was that type of infrastructure and entertainment… at current, our suburbia is often labeled as “boring” and a lot of people want to move away).

  • @will2003michael2003
    @will2003michael2003 Год назад +4

    A car is usually required to make big purchases as well. So there might be some strategy and catering to customers who can haul large amounts of stuff versus people who walk past with their tiny backpacks.

  • @AddieDirectsTV
    @AddieDirectsTV Год назад +12

    It's Ee-Dine-Uh not Ee-deeen-uh. Also, ironically, Southdale is accessible by bus. Direct to the door. As are the other "dales" around Minneapolis & Saint Paul. And even the Mall of America is accessible on the LRT or bus.

    • @jimsteele9261
      @jimsteele9261 Год назад +2

      Back when I was carless and healthier, I used to take the bus all the way across town to the mall. There were closer malls, but they all involved transfers and a lot of sitting around waiting for a connection or walking a mile or more to the other crosstown route. Seems the bus riding clientele were not the best. That mall became a bit hostile to bus riders, and even went as far as moving the bus stops way out to the edge of the lot. I even had some rentacop harass me for wearing a backpack... something you need on the bus to carry stuff..

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Год назад +2

      When they built Mall of America, my husband asked me, "Since all the other malls are -dales, will this one be 'Airdale' because it's near the airport?"

  • @MM-NolascoPH
    @MM-NolascoPH Год назад +10

    Malls here in the Philippines have a very opposite effect. They are like all-in-one stop where they have cinemas, grocery shops, restaurants, events places, shopping center/s, hardware stores, etc. I also love to walk around just to look around/window shopping, eat, or even just to get there because it has an air conditioners. Also, I would love to hang out and socialize and even go to the biggest malls there.

    • @antoniouresti8753
      @antoniouresti8753 11 месяцев назад

      We don’t care

    • @AlCatSplat
      @AlCatSplat 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@antoniouresti8753 I do.

    • @PinoyBowlerGS92
      @PinoyBowlerGS92 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@antoniouresti8753 Well good riddance to American Malls. Malls here in the Philippines are thriving and the Filipino society is different compare to American society. Why ? Lets say Americans watch movies on their TV's VS Filipinos would drive to a mall and go straight to the movie theater.

    • @bitchcraftwitch351
      @bitchcraftwitch351 7 месяцев назад

      @@antoniouresti8753I care this because is actually good information to know about why and how other countries are thriving in mall culture. America is killing it.

  • @Michaelebills
    @Michaelebills Год назад +4

    Here in Northern Virginia, Washington DC, and Southern Maryland, we have 'Town Centers' replacing malls. Town Centers are like malls, but now include condominiums, apartments, townhouses, hotels, theaters, grocery stores, restaurants, small and large stores, promenade, play areas, and relaxation areas. Along with Starbucks and Panera Bread. All they need now is to start building them closer to mass transit systems or bring mass transit systems to them.

  • @skitlus335
    @skitlus335 Год назад +41

    6:30 this basically explains why opening streets for pedestrians and bicyclists and closing or limiting them for car drivers tends to boost business, not ruin it.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Год назад +5

      Yep. Another strategy is to utilize the parallel streets and close off every other street or make it incredibly inconvenient to do so by having cobblestone and tram line inter urbans.

    • @samsmom1491
      @samsmom1491 Год назад +1

      There's been a rash of outdoor seating in my city for restaurants, cafes and coffee shops, but these are on busy streets where the smell of car exhaust makes sitting outdoors nauseating, not to mention the loud music of passing vehicles.

    • @CrAzYnAdEz
      @CrAzYnAdEz Год назад +1

      I'm actually surprised if thats true because from my experience whenever these new developments start to become less car friendly most people (including me and my friends/family) who live far away just stop going there altogether because it's no longer convenient. Wouldn't it make sense to have enough parking to attract people who are more than a walkable distance away? Idk but hey I'm glad they can still thrive even without being car friendly.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Год назад

      @@CrAzYnAdEz If you close every other street, then the streets that aren't closed can have on-street parking a la Jeff Speck.

    • @CrAzYnAdEz
      @CrAzYnAdEz Год назад +1

      @@KRYMauL Yeah but it won't be nearly enough parking spots though. In the metro Boston area where I live street parking is already a pain in the ass and expensive. If half of the street are closed to cars I would imagine the problem would be even worse. I also work as a courier driver and uber eats driver and me and many drivers have completely banned making deliveries in Boston because theres no place to park our cars when making deliveries.

  • @alcidesforever
    @alcidesforever Год назад +1

    Lovely video! 👍

  • @mattbosley3531
    @mattbosley3531 Год назад +5

    There are some malls and shopping centers that have public transportation easily available. Either a bus stop right in front where you can get on or off and don't have to go through the cars and parking lot or in some places light rail or a subway.

  • @deebte__
    @deebte__ Год назад +10

    currently i've been playing mall tycoon on roblox and the mall you build is far better than any american mall. instead of being some sprawling maze surrounded by parking it's a neat 12 story box with 6 stores and something special on each floor, and there's only around 50 parking spaces. it has a hotel, a movie theater, a few grocery stores (it's one of the special items and it can be a regular store), an art gallery and several other cool things that you wouldn't find in a real mall. make malls more like that

  • @maxdoubt5219
    @maxdoubt5219 Год назад

    Cool documentary. Interesting perspective.

  • @darthhauler9947
    @darthhauler9947 Год назад

    Well researched! I like it 🤠

  • @mariivik9
    @mariivik9 Год назад +6

    I personally wish there was more walkable areas in the US and better public transportation.
    Makes me miss living in South Korea. It was nice to walk out and have places nearby to hang out and do my shopping or socializing. Even if I couldn't purchase many things because I couldn't carry it all, I liked that as well because I wouldn't unnecessary spend on things I didn't need.

    • @mangos2888
      @mangos2888 Год назад +2

      Wendover has a great video in Curiosity Stream that goes over why the US is so awful at public transit and walkable areas. It's pre-pandemic but pretty amazing.

    • @mariivik9
      @mariivik9 Год назад

      @@mangos2888 thanks for the recommendation! I'll check it out 😊

  • @lw3542
    @lw3542 Год назад +4

    You just articulated the reasons I HATE suburbia and malls. It's depressing!

  • @joewitous6281
    @joewitous6281 4 месяца назад

    Great video!

  • @TJ-USMC
    @TJ-USMC Год назад

    Great Video !!!

  • @chillaxter13
    @chillaxter13 Год назад +3

    The real fallacy leading to the collapse of malls is in thinking that suburbanites actually want an urban experience. If I wanted a city experience, I'd drive to the city and walk around, or just move there. The draw of the suburbs is space, privacy, and limiting the people you have to interact with. If that's not for you, fine... That's why cities still exist. There is plenty of space for people to have different desires in their housing and communities.
    Btw: hearing your conclusion at the end, sounds like you came to the same conclusion, and it was really refreshing to hear that.

  • @MrGearoid65
    @MrGearoid65 Год назад +3

    In the UK and Ireland, the major anchor tenant for shopping centres (our name for shopping malls) is usually a well-known food retailer. That's to attract families who then buy clothes hardware etc in the other shops while they're at the centre... Makes perfect sense to me. In recent years with the development of retail parks, with big box stores, adjacent to shopping centres there were no food retailers in the retail parks. When German discounters, Lidl and Aldi arrived on our shores they often opened stores in these retail parks. I never really understood why US planning regulations insisted on separating retail from residential in the way that forces people to drive to a mall rather than strolling to the grocery store on the corner of a housing development. In Dublin, in the residential suburb where I live, you're nearly always within walking distance of a grocery shop. Fewer car journeys, fitter people.

  • @ManCaverTools
    @ManCaverTools Год назад +1

    You deserve a lot more than 11k subs bro

  • @blakespower
    @blakespower Год назад +4

    Most malls these days are mostly empty of people and closed stores since covid shut down everything but they were declining before that too

  • @jackcessna4887
    @jackcessna4887 Год назад +9

    As a Minnesotan i giggle at the way he pronounces "Edina"

    • @realisticrain8976
      @realisticrain8976 Год назад +2

      Same! I’ve even heard a few people say “Edna” 😂

  • @Billaxle
    @Billaxle Год назад +1

    The fact that a RUclips educational video has so many shots of my hometown Carson City NV, fills me with untold glee! 😁 I'm watching and thinking to myself "Hey! I know that place too! It's just a five minute walk from that other place in the video!" 😏

  • @KendrixTermina
    @KendrixTermina Год назад +2

    eventually in europe they started plopping them into city centers rather than remote business parks, designed so that theyre accessible both by foot & parking garage & usually with outward facing cafes, ice cream parlors or fast foot joints to lure in hungry pedestrians - and generally they try to make the outside facade fit the other buildings, and the "anchor" is usually a big grocery store, which is probably more robust.

  • @sk8razer
    @sk8razer Год назад +4

    I live in a large southwestern US city that's been putting a lot of effort into breaking away from the built-in car dependency. One super cool thing the city did manage to do in the 80s/90s was put transit hubs super adjacent to malls and bus stops inside of mall parking lots. So you didn't have to walk across a huge parking lot to go shopping or go to work.
    One of the malls has a dedicated crosswalk with a full bilateral sidewalk to the main entrance.
    We still heavily used malls as third spaces when I was a teen in the early 2000s, so it was extremely awesome that these areas were designed with a balance between cars and pedestrians in mind.
    Of course, these malls were built in areas that were already established as urban. Which does make a difference.
    These two urban malls in the area experienced a smallish drop in popularity when internet shopping first became widespread. But they've rallied quite a bit (with a lot more local businesses renting spaces), even as other older shopping districts, like downtown, have been heavily invested in by the city.
    I think this has a lot to do with a factor that that urbanites in in more temperate climates tend to overlook. Outdoor thirdspaces & shopping districts and reliance on private vehicles are a lot less realistic and a lot more dangerous in more extreme climates. If Vegas wasn't a major tourism destination, the strip would be vacant for a huge portion of the year.
    Walking or biking a few blocks in triple digit (F) heat isn't just miserable, it can be deadly. The same is true, to a lesser extent, for very cold climates. Aside from the extreme heat or cold, severe weather is also more likely in these areas.
    Indoor areas that simulate the outdoor pedestrian-focused areas in more temperate climates are very important spaces for all of us living in less comfortable year round conditions. Especially as climate change continues to accelerate.
    (Yes, Reno gets a lil hot and a lil cold, but it's definitely not an extreme climate)

  • @saphironkindris
    @saphironkindris Год назад +10

    Malls: For when you want to drive to your nearest walkable area.

  • @Leonid_333
    @Leonid_333 22 дня назад +1

    Channel name completely describes what people think about cities (and this is pretty good)

  • @Keykatriz
    @Keykatriz 9 месяцев назад +1

    Fun watch! My first job was at the Gottschaks anchor store at Park Lane over a decade ago, and when I was working the mall portion had already closed…it took them forever to redevelop the area! You may want to check out the Alderwood Mall in Lynnwood, WA. It has always been a fairly busy mall but over the last few years it has been surrounded by apartments, some right up against the mall. Of course, there’s still tons of parking space but I feel like they’re slowly chipping away at it. They are also expanding the rapid transit from Seattle to reach this mall which will mean living there would give you access to all the mall, Seattle’s downtown and university districts, and the Airport…now that’s the dream! The one thing the area appears to be missing is a real grocery store other than a Target and Costco, though most could probably make do with that and there’s still plenty of space for a Sprouts or whatever.
    My husband and I have really considered moving to that area, getting rid of the cars would be great and being able to walk to Target or the movies would be my dream, but the rent is still a little rich for us

  • @lyndonlives638
    @lyndonlives638 Год назад +9

    I was blown away when you said about 4 minutes in that malls in America are dominated by clothing and apparel stores and do not always contain grocery stores. Here in Australia we have plenty of malls, but every single mall I've been into always has at least one grocery store and often two big grocery stores! I can't imagine how frustrating it'd be going to a mall without a grocery store.

    • @Xenomorph-hb4zf
      @Xenomorph-hb4zf Год назад +3

      The grocery stores are usually Walmart or Target.

    • @OnBroGrave
      @OnBroGrave Год назад +1

      I've only been to one suburban mall with a grocery store (Memorial City) and it's a full size Target.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Год назад +1

      Southdale USED to have a grocery store when it was first built, but it was replaced by other retailers. The grocery store was moved out of the mall and across the street. And it was a "real" grocery store, not a Walmart or Target.

    • @toddbonny3708
      @toddbonny3708 Год назад

      I only know of one mall here in Houston (Memorial City) that includes a supermarket (Target).

    • @toddbonny3708
      @toddbonny3708 Год назад

      @@OnBroGrave wow I just saw this after posting the exact same thing!

  • @davidty2006
    @davidty2006 Год назад +4

    Think suburbs also encourage more online shopping and delivery as well.
    That also ends up killing off many smaller buisnesses that require people walking past to notice.
    My towns has it's slap bang in the middle and it ended up replacing a high street. Now it's atleast half empty despite having all the local bus lines, ability to walk to it and plenty of parking with 2 surface, 1 semi underground and a parking garage. 1 of the surface lots becomes a market on thursdays.

  • @realityorfiction
    @realityorfiction Год назад +1

    I live in reno and I've been watching channels like "not just bikes" and I was wondering "I wonder what a channel focused on reno would be like " or "this city is pretty car dependent I want to seee if analyzed". And here you are. Thank you

  • @Lurch685
    @Lurch685 Год назад +2

    One of my first jobs was security at an outdoor shopping mall in the Chicago area. I never had more fun at a job. It’s higher end and upscale, but I can’t imagine they’re doing well financially.

  • @vagurl84
    @vagurl84 Год назад +3

    Empty anchor stores aren’t closed indefinitely as long as there is Spirit Halloween.
    I’d like to see an indoor mall designed like a downtown area with trees, little “outdoor” patios to eat on, and a little train then “cars” to play in. Kind of like they used to have in Las Vegas.

  • @RoundHouseDictator
    @RoundHouseDictator Год назад +5

    Malls should be retrofit as schools. Small store spaces could make good classrooms. Backrooms make decent teacher offices and often have access halls that could be accessible for office hours. They already have robust food courts, administrative offices, and typically a gym. Also they are nicer than the schools I went to

    • @jeanetteshawredden5643
      @jeanetteshawredden5643 Год назад +1

      Excellent idea!

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 Год назад +1

      One abandoned anchor store in our dying mall is being converted into apartments--but not ones most people can afford.

    • @RoundHouseDictator
      @RoundHouseDictator Год назад

      @@karenryder6317 it's reusing a built space and not building a new one, so I'll take the win I guess. The neighborhood is walkable and the weather is remarkably consistent, is it a 55+ community?

  • @DivinesLegacy
    @DivinesLegacy Год назад +2

    The key to walkability is density, How do you convince people who don’t want to be packed into dense areas to be packed into denser areas? Most downtowns are walkable, The issue is most Americans don’t desire apartment buildings, rather desire a big house with yard space and being isolated, which causes sprawl resulting in needing a car.

  • @EricSees
    @EricSees Год назад +2

    A couple of comments on southdale.
    It's in Edina, and the I is pronounced like eye
    They currently have built apartments and a hotel on the fringes of the parking lot.
    It's got a fitness studio and a government service space for things like license plates, etc.
    The mall of America was built a few miles away, so southdale is heading towards the dying mall status but still has quite a few shoppers
    The Dayton corporation at one time had Daytona, Mervyn's California, and Target. Daytona was sold to Macy's, Mervyn's is no longer with us, and Target remains. One of their largest revenue streams is from rent in malls.
    They are based in Minneapolis, MN.

  • @Nico_M.
    @Nico_M. Год назад +7

    It's funny that one of the self-defined world's freest societies have such restrictive zoning laws.
    -Hey, how are you doing?
    -Hey, fine, and you?
    -Fine, fine. I was planning to eat a chicken inside a duck inside a turkey. With a diet coke, of course.
    -Nice, you do you.
    -And tomorrow I'll take my wife to a monster truck show.
    -Great! Those things are awesome!
    -And we're planning on expanding our home, we want a few new rooms and we're thinking on building another floor above us.
    -What?! Are you crazy?! What kind of maniac would want that?!

  • @AbsalomIndustries
    @AbsalomIndustries Год назад +4

    Interestingly, on the West Coast, I can't think of a single store in a downtown area that I would actually want to shop at for any sort of regular shopping. Here in SF there IS a Target downtown, but it's small, cramped, and short on the stuff I would want to buy at a normal sized Target, making it more of a hassle to get to than anything else, especially because there's only expensive paid parking nearby, making any trip a purely public-transit affair, heavily limiting the amount and kind of goods I think about buying there, and I am already willing to carry far more than most people would on public transit (between 80 and 100 pounds of groceries, which is probably well in excess of what most people consider practical).

  • @kaibrightwing
    @kaibrightwing Год назад +1

    I live in reno. And Miss park lane mall had all the stores I liked and the theater at the end. Met up with my friends, played games at the game store, had something to eat, or saw a movie. I miss that mall a lot.

  • @tonilafountain636
    @tonilafountain636 Год назад +2

    Mall design should of been like micro climates. Housing up top, shops below, parking garage attached to "entrance" area nearest highway. Like a mini city!

  • @mariusfacktor3597
    @mariusfacktor3597 Год назад +14

    13:51 We designed our cities such that children need to run for their lives in the same spots every day. What a horrendous, negligent, wasteland. How can anyone be okay with this.

  • @MaQuGo119
    @MaQuGo119 Год назад +4

    How did American houses looked before the suburban experiment?

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +8

      As far as detached homes, they were generally on smaller lots on a grid of streets and didn't have a driveway or a garage, had sidewalks in the front, and were within walking distance of shops and restaurants. Of course, there were also row houses, townhomes, and apartments as well.

    • @MaQuGo119
      @MaQuGo119 Год назад +1

      @@danielkelly2210 Thanks!

    • @Yawyna124
      @Yawyna124 Год назад

      Not necessarily always super close within walking distance, but yeah, on smaller, square, lots in a blocking grid. I would give you a proper link, but RUclips nowadays blocks all of those. Like, for example, in my hometown, the older housing of it is a stretch of extensively tree-covered, smaller town houses between downtown and the foothills. Following message will have image.
      For historical reference, that city, Boise, and its metropolitan developed around rail up into the early 1920's but then, as cars became more prevalent, tram services became discontinued and in some cases the lines were simply paved over.

    • @Yawyna124
      @Yawyna124 Год назад

      upload(daht)Wikimedia(daht)org/wikipedia/commons/d/d1/Table_Rock_Boise_View(daht)jpg For a good picture.

  • @hm5142
    @hm5142 Год назад +1

    I live in the Washington DC suburbs, and most of the growth around here is mixed use, with retail stores at ground level, residential on the higher floors, and built near metro stations. By and large, this is making the area more walkable, which is good. And if you do have to drive to a grocery, it is not far. So I think the planning process is actually improving the area, but the time scale is in decades or generations.

  • @Anon21486
    @Anon21486 Год назад +2

    I think a pretty good example of revitalizing is in Somerville, MA, specifically the Assembly Row/Assembly Square Mall area. The area has been developed and now, has a public greenspace, healthcare center, movie theatre, many shops at ground level, including food options, and also a new subway station.

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 Год назад

      Does it have housing nearby?

    • @Anon21486
      @Anon21486 Год назад

      @@karenryder6317 "many shops at ground level"
      Should have specified that the upper levels are housing. However, they are not affordable...

  • @KRYMauL
    @KRYMauL Год назад +4

    The thing I don’t understand is that apartments or a neighborhood attached to a mall would actually guarantee a continuous income stream for all the businesses especially if the real estate company was the land lord of the apartment complex. I guess this is why more apartments are doing this now.

  • @Tiberiuskirk
    @Tiberiuskirk Год назад +3

    I think that is the one change that has happened is all the food stores wanted to have their own locations. There was a time at malls near me where you could actually do it all.

  • @sk8ben66
    @sk8ben66 Год назад +2

    the funny part with all the footage in your video is you cannot says where there came from.because you can find they exact setup almost everywhere in canada or us suburb

  • @stuartdilts2729
    @stuartdilts2729 Год назад

    The mall in my home town did a major remodel, and converted a 4th of its parking to apartments. The shopping space is technically smaller than it was before, but I've still never seen the parking lot full. The section that is in front of the grocery store usually has the first couple of rows full, but I've never seen it packed. It just goes to show how much excess space there was (and still is) for cars.

  • @chaborrogp
    @chaborrogp Год назад +8

    drive to walk...terrible!!!

  • @vincetalancon604
    @vincetalancon604 Год назад

    Bro thanks for this video I missed my Reno Home had to move back to California in 2019. The video showed me a lot of my home thanks

  • @divingdays
    @divingdays Год назад +2

    I’m from the Czech Republic and my parents recently moved back there after my dad retired. There are a total of two malls that I know of that are near where my parents live (near is a strong word) however this mall has a slew of different stores including a butcher shop, grocery store, household goods store, vehicle store for maintenenance etc. it was really different

  • @julie.1081
    @julie.1081 Год назад +4

    So far, I haven't heard you mention a damn good reason why malls started in MN. Because shopping in MN winter weather sucks. And a good part of spring weather does too. If you've never had to dress for that weather & take it off & out it all back on going in & out from every store, you'll never understand why Southdale opened. Now we don't need to leave our homes at all.

  • @bastonneknight9478
    @bastonneknight9478 Год назад +3

    Part of the mall vacancy problem is they are not an ideal place for a small business, even something like a booth can be incredibly expensive. I was part of a company trying to open a 4x6 foot booth in a local mall, although you have to pay for a 10x10 foot space centered on the booth. The requirements were the booth had to be of their design, we needed to be insured for $3 million, the fees were $6000 + 5% taxes + 5% "promo" per month (a fee that they never explained in any detail), signage had to be done through them for $250 (a plastic screen with the business name on it we could have had done for $50), and we would have to hire a professional merchandiser (yes, our company was not allowed to merchandise our own products). Needless to say the deal fell through, as we would not even be allowed to use display cases or shelves and instead had to lay the product on the table meaning very little of the product range could be showed off.
    With all these costs, is it any wonder that businesses are preferring online retail? The company in question dissolved as our suppliers were interested in a physical store front and already had an online presence, so the whole project was centered on these small booths expanding their market presence. Notes, prices are in Canadian dollars.

    • @bastonneknight9478
      @bastonneknight9478 Год назад +2

      Another note, empty stores are actually good for the mall and intentional. The mall is after all a property and the property value is tied to the rent that they charge, with this mall in particular being $60 per square foot (and why a previous company I worked for mandated $300 per square foot of merchandise within their store). It's good to have empty stores, because the alternative is lowering the rent to something more affordable, but lower rent also means the properties value reduces. Malls are an investment and like any other investment property they must show a continual growth or at the very least stability of their property value to keep attracting investors. This also leads to interesting arrangements where the anchor store I worked for was required by their lease to also maintain the roof of their section of the building. Unsurprisingly they served their investors by letting it fall into disrepair.

    • @stanmarcusgtv
      @stanmarcusgtv Год назад +3

      you have just explained why grocery stores are not at malls - they are a low margin business and would have to charge much more to operate there

    • @bastonneknight9478
      @bastonneknight9478 Год назад +2

      @@stanmarcusgtv Spot on, the mall I mentioned does have a grocery store and they are rather pricey.