
About This Issue
First developed in the mid-twentieth century, the shopping mall became one of the most influential architectural types in the United States. Designed as controlled environments, malls reshaped patterns of commerce, movement, and public life.
This issue documents the mall’s architectural evolution, from its origins in the work of Victor Gruen to its continued transformation today.
WATCH: Southdale Center & Victor Gruen’s Failed Utopia
Victor Gruen set out to save the American city by bringing civic life indoors. But when Southdale Center opened in 1956, his revolutionary design gave rise to a new kind of architecture, one that would reshape the landscape in ways he never intended.
Building Biography
THRIVING BY DESIGN: THE SOUTH COAST PLAZA STORY


A Personal Note
A Walk Through The LA Grove
Adaptive Reuse
The Afterlife of the American Mall

