99% Invisible - Secret Mall Apartment
Episode Date: March 25, 2025A group of artists explored the back hallways of a mall in Providence, RI, and found the perfect place to build a private hangout. We interviewed the group's leader Michael Townsend a few years back, ...and he's now the subject of a new documentary called Secret Mall Apartment. Plus, mall history with Alexandra Lange.For showtimes and more information, visit secretmallapartment.com.The stories in this episode originally aired in 2018 and 2022.Secret Mall Apartments Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and get exclusive access to bonus episodes. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
Transcript
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
There is so much to do at the mall. You can get your ears pierced. You can build a bear. You can go get an orange Julius.
Late at night, when the Game Stops and the hot topics are all locked up and the food court's taken out the last of the trash, it is usually time to go home.
But what if the mall was your home?
This ad came on for the Proppments Place Mall.
It was this woman talking about how
it was going to be so convenient for her to get everything
that she needed for her kids, for herself.
If only she could live there.
I just had this idea, oh, we should live in the mall.
The new documentary, Secret Mall Apartment,
is about a group of artists who built, you guessed it,
a secret apartment inside of the mall.
We interviewed the group's ringleader,
Michael Townsend, a few years back,
and after the story, we'll have an update
about what's happened since then.
In downtown Providence, Rhode Island, there's a large plot of land that sits on the bank of the Wunosquaducket River. In 1838, it was the home of the Rhode Island State Prison, which was notorious
for its horrid smell, dreary outward appearance, and reputation for solitary confinement. Later,
the land housed the continuing education campus
for the University of Rhode Island.
And after that, a dirt parking lot called Ray's Park and Lock.
Then in 1999, in a grand effort to revitalize the city
and with much fanfare, the Providence Place Mall was opened.
That's Vanessa Lowe, producer of the podcast Nocturne.
The mall, costing $500 million, was what was known as a super-regional, a one-stop shopping
destination, housing everything consumers could possibly want or need in a totally enclosed
space.
Partially funded by taxpayer money, it spanned 13 acres, offered 1.4 million square feet
of retail space, and dominated the riverfront.
It was the largest construction project in Providence's history.
Oh, this one building, and we sort of stood in awe watching it get built.
Michael Townsend is an artist who lived nearby when the mall was still under construction
in the 1990s.
His daily running route took him past the construction site.
And Michael says that as he watched it go up, he had an open mind about the project.
He was cautiously optimistic that it would be a welcome addition to the neighborhood.
But yeah, that didn't last long.
It's funny, the revulsion to a building like that doesn't really kick in until the skin
gets put on.
When something is in its erector set mode,
when you're just seeing the skeleton,
you're like, oh, that's a pretty cool skeleton,
but as soon as the flesh is there,
you're like, ooh, not pretty.
Providence Place was going to be a big boxy stack of shops
without much in the way of architectural niceties.
And on his runs, Michael watched as that big box
was slowly filled with the things that
make a mall a mall.
As it's being built, I start to sort of do mental maps of spaces.
You know, that's going to be a store, that's going to be a storage space, that's going
to be parking.
But amidst all the construction, there was one part of the building that kept catching
Michael's eye.
A weird space in the guts of the architecture
That didn't make sense. I
Thought that was really odd. It didn't seem to meet the profile of either a storage space or a parking space or store space
Michael wasn't sure what the space was for it seemed to exist only by virtue of the walls
Intended for the more legitimate spaces around it.
But the result was this room.
It was an accidental room, a remainder left over by the long division of the mall's architecture.
I had never seen anything like it. And every time I ran by it, it was something that I would think about.
Michael eventually put the strange room out of his mind.
He probably would have forgotten about it entirely,
except that four years later, a second group of developers,
encouraged by the success of Providence Place,
set their sights even closer to Michael.
This time, they wanted to build right
on top of the historic Mill District, where
Michael and a dozen or so other artists lived and worked
in an old industrial building they called Fort Thunder. The developers had used a
computer algorithm to figure out where to place a new supermarket so that it
wouldn't compete with other supermarkets in the area. And I got to see this
computer print out and it's sort of like a nuclear explosion map. You can sort of
see the radius from each supermarket and their theoretical reach. And in the blank spot that was our neighborhood, they put an X directly
on the building we were living.
And that was just the start. The developers wanted to tear down all of the old mill buildings
and replace them with yet more retail with little to no pedestrian access.
And it appears that the only mantra they have is if you see a space that's underdeveloped,
you have a God-given responsibility to develop it.
And it was basically like having a complete stranger be like,
we've been thinking about it and we think we want to knock your house down
and make it a parking lot if it's cool with you. Now normally this would be the part of the story
where we tell you that Michael and the other residents of Fort Thunder banded together to
save their home in the face of the relentless march of capital, but no it's not that kind of
story. Granted they did save some buildings,
but as for Fort Thunder…
Oh, our actual home? Oh yeah, they f***ing leveled that. They came in with bulldozers
and cranes and knocked that sucker flat.
Fort Thunder was gone. The reason we're telling you this story is because of what happened
next.
Because, when I see something like that, I'm like, ho ho ho, really?
Game on.
Michael and his friends had lost their home.
And in their mind, it had all started with that first mall.
That was the original seed of development
that had led to everything else.
And so talk began of a mall-related action.
Call it art, call it a stunt,
but a plan started to take shape.
Michael and his friends decided that they would find a way to live in the mall for seven
days.
Yeah, live in the mall.
And they set a rule for themselves.
They couldn't leave.
And without a second thought of thinking about how unfeasible that is, for our own well-being,
we really felt that we had to do it.
And if this sounds like a lark,
well, yeah, it kinda was,
but a secretly serious lark.
The four friends, they would eventually number eight,
wanted to assert that spaces like the mall
could belong just as much to them as to the developers.
To really do this right,
they would need to find a space in the mall where they could
hide themselves away.
And Michael had the perfect place in mind.
He began to search for that mysterious room that he'd noticed when the mall was under
construction all those years before.
He remembered seeing that the room was connected to a kind of crevice, a narrow gap in the
building structure that eventually led out to an exterior wall.
So one night, Michael went to see if the entrance to that crevice had ever been sealed off.
Amazingly, it hadn't.
It was small and sort of hidden, but there was still a crack in the exterior of the mall.
And so he and his then-wife Adriana turned themselves sideways and slipped inside.
And then once you're in at that point, you are exploring a system of caverns, long, weird,
vertical caverns. And there are places where it just falls down into the lower levels of
the mall. So you've got about a foot and a half of cliff,
but you're looking into a black abyss.
And then this series of chambers
ultimately give you access to this space.
The room was tall and wide,
filled with the byproducts of the mall's construction
from years before.
Broken two by fours and screws and plastic zip ties
that hadn't even been worth removing.
The space had literally been forgotten.
And it was big.
It was a big space that served no other purpose.
It wasn't a storefront and it wasn't a stairwell.
It was just big and it was a thrill to physically find it
and be like, this is it.
This is what I remember.
The room was in the guts of the building.
The part that no one was ever supposed to use
or even really see.
But Michael and Adriana saw that it could still be accessed
by multiple hidden entry points,
including from inside the shopping center itself.
If you knew how to get there, you could walk there from the Macy's.
But as far as they could tell, they were the only people who knew this room existed.
It was at that moment that the friend's scheme started changing.
The initial plan had been to spend a week in the mall, but the way they saw it, they
were sitting on 750 square feet
of underutilized space.
Then they asked themselves, what would a developer do?
Because after all,
if you see a space that's underdeveloped,
you have a God given responsibility to develop it.
So we decided that perhaps the absolute best thing
we could do is just build a condo.
That is always the answer.
If you're not sure what to do with the space, just make it a condo.
The new plan was no longer to live in the mall for a week.
It was now simply to live in the mall for days at a time, using the room as an apartment.
And while that may sound like a nightmare to everyone, but a few weird artists from Providence,
Michael and his friends got to work on this little project
with the excitement of new homeowners.
Step one, of course, was cleaning.
They had to get rid of all that debris.
It's sort of like, you know, like in a prison break movie.
We were literally filling up our backpacks
with just dirt and grime,
and then carrying it out of the mall and getting rid of it.
And for every backpack full of debris they took out, they'd bring a pack full of something in.
Gallon jugs of water for drinking and cleaning, clamp lights and extension cords for illumination,
which they plugged into the mall's internal power system, parts for an ad hoc kitchen.
They even built a cinder block wall to hide the space from anyone else who might venture into the cavern complex from its various other
entrances.
We went and got a door that was an exact mirror of the doors they use in the mall. So if you
were to find it, unless you're looking really closely at first glance, it just looks exactly
like it had been built originally.
Finally, it was time to decorate.
Anything we could buy at the mall, we would.
A low table came in on top of that,
proudly perched with a television and our PlayStation.
But if we couldn't buy it at the mall,
we'd have to bring it into the mall.
And that's for the large pieces like the China Hutch
or the fourth piece sectional couch.
Nobody looked twice that you brought pieces of a couch through the mall?
How did you get that in there?
In broad daylight.
We avoided the night and sort of worked with the ebb and flow of the mall.
We were just part of the living organism of its daily activities.
It may seem risky trying to furnish a secret apartment with a nested coffee table, but
to anyone watching, it was just a person walking through a mall with a nested coffee table
that they just bought at the mall.
There's simply no such thing as a suspicious consumer item in a building that is dedicated
to consumerism.
The friends would sometimes stay in the secret apartment for several weeks in a row, just
living, watching television, making collages with shadow boxes they bought at Pottery Barn,
even cooking in the ad hoc kitchen. Michael remembers burning some waffles with a waffle
iron and wondering if the smoke would give them away.
And when the eight friends weren't enjoying their secret apartment, they were enjoying
the mall, not as shoppers, but as residents.
Thanks to its late night movie theater, the mall almost never closed.
So sometimes they would just roam the building with no goal in mind, observing its many moods.
There are times when that entire building probably had maybe 10 people in it, like in
the middle of the night.
There'd be security officers, there'd be cleaning staff.
And it's a really wonderful time because it's like having a public park four levels
deep all to yourself.
And in those moments, there's a sense of ownership
and I just feel really good.
Weeks turned to months and eventually years.
Out of the emotional rubble of Fort Thunder, they'd finally found their refuge.
And all thanks to the mall's developers, who had accidentally provided a sanctuary from the world they were
busy developing.
But as the old saying goes, there comes a time in every man's life when he must stop
living at the mall.
Unfortunately, the seed got planted that this whole thing was going to unravel. And that's
because we had a break-in.
One day, they came back to the apartment,
only to discover that someone had kicked open the door
and stolen the PlayStation,
along with several other small items,
including the art they had made and a photo album.
But they left the silverware, they left the TV,
we're like, this is a very odd burglary.
Like they didn't take the things of value,
they only took the things that were like super personal.
Michael and his friends were spooked.
They had managed to hide the apartment for four years,
but now someone knew about the room.
Someone who could come back at any time
and who seemed to be interested in them.
So they changed things up.
They decided from now on, they'd only stay there at night
when the chances of being caught were low,
never during the day.
And crucially, they would double down on another rule
they'd had since almost the very beginning.
Don't share it with anyone.
Don't physically bring anyone here
who wasn't involved in the making of it.
So a lot of my very, very good and best friends
never saw the space.
And I'm the one who took that rule and broke it.
Michael was hosting a visiting artist from Hong Kong. Her name was Jaffa.
He was driving her to the bus station on her way out of town.
And we're driving past the mall and I say to myself, what can it hurt?
How could this possibly backfire on me?
So I brought her into the space.
Her mind was absolutely blown.
You got to remember that this is at the peak of its build out.
Michael showed Jaffa everything.
The couch, the lights, the television.
They were just days away from installing a water tank
and a wood floor.
In spite of the break-in, after four years of work,
the apartment was on the verge of feeling like a real home.
But when we're leaving, I hear a walkie talkie
on the other side of the door within two feet of us.
And when the door opens, it's three dudes in ties and sports jackets.
And I realize in that moment, I internalize that it's over.
It turned out that the earlier break-in had been the work of two of the mall's newest security guards.
Instead of removing everything, they had taken the personal items in hopes of figuring out
who Michael and his friends were.
Now that Michael had been foolish enough to come back during the day, they had their man.
General Growth Properties, the company that owned the mall, did not take kindly to the
secret apartment in its walls.
You don't say?
After being handed over to the police and interrogated, Jaffa was eventually let go.
But Michael soon found himself standing in front of a judge in criminal court, charged
with breaking and entering and felony trespass.
By the time I get to court, the mall has hired a lawyer and they launch into all these details
about the illegal things that I have done.
And I keep my mouth shut.
But after they've gone through this laundry list
of illegal activities, they use the phrase,
this gave Mr. Townsend access to an apartment
that they had built over several years
that had the following things in it
and goes onto list in detail what the apartment looked like.
Including the coffee table, the television,
a copy of the game Grand Theft Auto,
an eight foot China hutch, a four piece sectional couch,
silverware for eight with matching glassware,
a six foot pot.
And the more details this lawyer gives,
the more the judge just looks around.
And he's like, what's happening here?
The judge hustles advisors close to him, and I hear him whispering.
And then he looks up, looks me dead in the eyes, and he goes,
this is not a criminal act.
We're not sure exactly what it was, but this is not a crime.
Whether the judge was perceiving a deep legal truth at the heart of this case, or Michael
was just the beneficiary of an incredible amount of white privilege, Michael may never
know.
In the end, he was slapped with a misdemeanor for trespassing and released.
He had lived on and off in the secret apartment
for nearly four years,
and it was going to cost him almost nothing.
But that doesn't mean he got away entirely scot-free.
Just before Michael left the mall,
the mall security team handed him a piece of paper,
the same piece of paper they hand to brawlers, shoplifters,
and anyone else who has overstayed their welcome
in this most private of public spaces.
This is standardized manila piece of paper which has a map of the mall.
It has this red line around the whole thing.
You have to sign it and it says you can't cross that red line.
So to make it clear you're never coming back. Now, over a decade later,
Michael still lives right near the mall.
But his days of running anywhere near its 13 acres are over.
And the biggest bummer for me is that
if I want to go to downtown,
the path that you bring your bike through
is through the center of the malt where it bridges over the river
And now that I'm banned from the mall. I have to bike around it
And I and I've biked around it for 10 years
Diligently I've I have never broken this rule. So you really can never go back. I could never go back
go back. I could never go back.
Since we heard that story, Michael did honor the ban, up until very recently. At the climax of the new documentary, he sneaks back in to see what's left of the apartment, but all he finds is a door
and a couple of cinder blocks. Meanwhile, things are not going well for the mall. By the fall of 2024, its management company had fallen behind on their $259 million of
debt and a judge ordered the mall into receivership.
Attorneys John Dorsey and Mark Russo were appointed to turn around the mall's finances
and lure shoppers back.
As part of their publicity push, they have effectively granted Townsend a pardon.
They commissioned him to install art pieces and empty storefronts, and the mall's movie theater hosted a premiere of
the documentary. Dorsey even went into the mall's catacombs for a photo-op where the
apartment had been. And one of the ideas that Dorsey and Russo have floated to save the
mall is converting some parts of it into residential apartments. Legal, non-secret apartments.
That episode was reported by Vanessa Lowe, edited by Joe Rosenberg, tech production by
Sharif Youssef, a different version originally aired on the podcast Nocturne.
Secret Mall Apartment is playing now in select cities. Michael and his friends filmed almost
everything they did at the time, and the footage is delightful
to watch.
We'll have a link in the show notes.
After the break, where did malls come from, and where are they going?
In the credits of the Secret Mall Apartment documentary, there's one name in the special
thanks section that will jump out at you if you're a long time 99PI listener, and that's
the name Alexandra Lang.
We've had her on the show as an expert eight times, which I think might be a record.
Anyway, back in 2022, she came on the show to tell us about the rise and fall of the
mall, how the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the shift towards online shopping, and what we should do with all that
empty space.
Like many teens in the 80s, my first job was at the mall.
I was 14.
I lied about my age.
I was a busboy in an Applebee-style restaurant
that no longer exists.
On Saturdays, I often worked three shifts in a row,
so I witnessed the entire circadian rhythm of the mall.
At eight o'clock, I'd clean windows
as the senior citizens in tracksuits
powered through the empty halls,
passing by shops with the cage doors still rolled down.
By midday, the families took over, and my usual job of cleaning glasses and plates
involved cleaning up piles of food spilled on the floor.
By evening, the teens arrived. They couldn't afford the restaurant,
but I could see them in packs, congregating by the fountain,
always ready, with an unkind word or some act of cruelty.
The mall felt terrible.
I hated it.
But despite this, on days when I wasn't working, I had my mom drop me off at the mall.
Kids in small towns and suburbs play the hand they're dealt and being able to
walk around on your own, maybe buying a cassette tape of the Smith's live album at Sam Goody,
is the best that life has to offer.
I was not a very cool teen. Let me just say, I was a very nerdy teen.
This is cool adult in front of the show, Alexander Lang.
I feel like there are a lot of
teenage mall scenarios that I did not participate in.
Like I did not like meet my first bow at the mall.
I did not like stroll around with shopping bags
showing off at the mall.
None of that.
But no teen in the 80s could completely avoid
the gravitational pull of the mall.
Alexandra is the author of a new book
called Meet Me By The Fountain.
I think part of the whole argument of this book
is really that people are social creatures
and that the mall had to be created
because the suburbs didn't really initially
think about a space for people to come together.
Even though we're past the heyday of the mall,
Alexandra says we haven't seen the death of the mall,
even after two and a half years of a global pandemic.
I think that people are people and they're going to want to like go back out and get together again. I think we've seen that in like the tremendous use of parks during the pandemic.
And when we can safely gather indoors, like people are going to be excited to do that because
who wants to go to a park in December?
We're gonna talk about how the mall became
a ubiquitous part of American culture
and what's happening today
as malls across the country start to disappear.
Okay, so let's get down to some basics.
What is a mall?
What makes something a mall
versus other shopping centers that existed before or after?
Well, a shopping center is outdoors and a mall is indoors. That's the most basic thing.
A shopping center is a strip mall or a line of stores facing the parking lot with some sort of
covering over the space in front of them. Whereas a mall is indoors.
And the earliest malls were basically just
like two shopping strips put together.
So you had a department store at each end
and then two lines of shops facing each other
and a covered central aisle that usually had fountains
and plants and benches and other amenities.
So they were really just that super simple
kind of eye-shaped plan.
And this shape, the long hallway,
is where the word mall comes from.
That's right, yeah.
Basically, the name mall comes from Paul Mall in London,
which is a narrow street where they used to play a kind of bowling game.
So it was this long, narrow outdoor space where people would come together to play.
And so the mall from Paul Mall turned into a landscape term for that kind of long, narrow green space.
So then when you enclose that long, narrow space under a roof, it is another kind of mall.
So the mall in Washington is also a mall
from the same origin, even though we don't really think
about a shopping mall and the mall in Washington
in the same mental place.
That place with the reflecting pool and the Lincoln
on one side, that's the Capitol Mall. Right.
Lincoln is the anchor store of the National Mall.
He's the Macy's of the Capitol Mall.
So Victor Gruen is credited as the father of the mall.
What was he trying to do?
What was he trying to make?
So Gruen was an emigre from Austria, fled the Nazis to the US in the late 1930s.
And he had really strong memories of the kind of charming streets of Vienna, where there
are cafes and people gather at fountains and there's this whole rich outdoor life.
So he came to America, he initially designed these very glamorous stores in Manhattan,
and then he was taken up by some department store executives
who were like, move to California,
design our department stores.
So he started designing these freestanding department stores
and he just felt kind of crushed by the landscape
around those department stores.
Because you could go to the store and you could park
and you could go in,
but then you couldn't do anything else.
Like you couldn't leave and sit at a cafe,
there was nowhere to meet your friends.
There was none of the kind of fabric of the city
that he found in European cities.
So in the early 1940s, Gruin was living in New York
and flying back and forth across the country a lot, like major,
major airplane miles.
And he gets stuck in Detroit on a cross-country flight because of fog.
And he thinks, oh, okay, like, I'm not going to waste this time I have on the ground in
Detroit.
You know, it's like he asked his friends, where is life happening in Detroit?
And they said, oh, it's all out in the suburbs.
Okay. Where is life happening in Detroit? And they said, oh, it's all out in the suburbs.
So he gets driven around the suburbs
and he finds what he's been finding elsewhere in the US,
that yes, there are all these new houses
and yes, there are all these strip malls,
but there's nowhere to go.
And he thinks that he, you know, master salesman,
he should be able to sell J.L. Hudson on the idea of building
a branched apartment store and a shopping center in the suburbs.
And over the next several years, he does this, he actually sells them on the idea of building
four of them, Northland, Southland, Eastland, and Westland.
Yeah, I've always wondered about that.
Like, why do so many malls have cardinal directions in the name?
No matter what city you're in, they're all Westfield or Southport.
Why is that?
This is the origin story, and this is one way in which I know the book can be slightly
confusing because all the malls sound the same and it's like, yeah, that was on purpose. Because if you're thinking about your city with the center point downtown, all of these
malls wanted to establish where they were in relation to that center point.
So if you were driving north on the main highway out of town, you would encounter Northland
or North Park or Northfield or Northdale
or one of these other things.
Same with South, East or West.
So all of them are named after the cardinal points so that people know kind of where to
find them in relation to downtown.
And then the second part of the word is gate because it's an entry to the city, it's land because that was open land before,
it's park because they're attaching it to a parkway.
They have vague geographical associations.
The problem really comes that I grew up going to
North Gate Mall in Durham, North Carolina,
but there's a much more famous North Gate Mall in Seattle,
that was one of the first malls.
And it's like, so you always have to specify, you know,
which city you're talking about.
Yeah.
And it feels like there's a certain point
where the naming convention becomes
just a meaningless convention.
Like, I, the, the, one of the fancier malls
in downtown San Francisco is called Westfield.
I don't think it's west of anything or a field at all.
But maybe that's just, I don't know, maybe you know.
No, no, Westfield is actually a huge mall conglomerate
that's now owned by Australians.
Yeah.
But Westfield may be originally named after a Westfield
that was in some town.
So Gruen designed these malls in Michigan,
and he saw the early mall as more of a mixed-use hub.
There were shops and department stores,
but also post offices and doctor's offices.
How long did that idea of a mall last?
Yeah, Gruen definitely saw the malls
as having a community function,
and that's really explicit in a lot of his writings in the malls as having a community function, and that's really explicit
in a lot of his writings in the 1940s and 1950s.
And he wasn't alone in that.
There are other early mall developers, including James Rouse, who comes back into the story
later, who also built malls circa 1955, 1956, that had community spaces.
They might have church spaces,
they definitely had doctor's offices,
a lot of malls also had nurseries.
So these early malls had a lot more community functions
built in and they were thought of as replacing downtown.
And so having these mixed use functions.
But what happened was over time, like by the mid mid-1960s, there just start to be more
and more malls, and they're not being designed and created by these original developers,
and the developers just want to make money.
And they've also found that, you know, the mall has been kind of incorporated as an American
pastime, and it turns out you don't need to have a community space for your mall
to operate like a community center.
Like it's just doing that anyway.
So the mall is often blamed for killing downtowns, but is this completely fair?
Was the mall a reaction to filling a void that was already created by downtowns in decline,
or did they contribute in some way?
The early malls were really predicated on investment by the department stores, but the
department store owners only made that investment after they were already seeing a loss of business The early malls were really predicated on investment by the department stores, but the
department store owners only made that investment after they were already seeing a loss of business
downtown.
And the families who owned these department stores were frequently major urban philanthropists.
They were the ones who paid for new shows at the museum.
They were really power players in Minneapolis, Detroit, Philadelphia, and these other cities.
But as the suburbs expanded because the houses were built first, they began to draw all of
this energy away from downtowns.
And initially, and now it seems foolishly in retrospect, people thought that women would
drive back into downtowns to shop during the day, either drive or take
public transportation.
But once women and children were kind of ensconced in their houses in the suburbs, that was just
impossible.
Like who would want to do that?
And the shopping options were really limited because they were mostly these strip malls
that had a supermarket and a drug store and maybe a kid's shoe store.
But they didn't have the kind of full service department store
that they did downtown.
So department store owners really
wanted people to keep going downtown,
because that's where they had put all of this time
in investment.
That was not an accurate read on human behavior.
So very reluctantly, department store owners
began first to build some small, freestanding stores. behavior. So very reluctantly, department store owners began
first to build some small freestanding stores, they called
them, you know, like junior stores. And then Gruen kind of
came up with this way by packaging the department store
with other stores that they could keep like their sense of
dignity. Like they really wanted their stores to still be
glamorous and still be special and not just another thing by the highway.
So the Gruen idea of the indoor shopping mall allowed them to keep some of that glamour
from downtown and also feed off other shopping, but move out to the suburbs.
So these early malls go up and they get a lot of attention, especially this one large
mall designed by Victor Gruen in Adina, Minnesota, called
Southdale Center. And it's a big media story. But how are
these early malls received by the architecture and design
world at large? Like, how did they respond?
The architecture press was totally wowed by the early
malls. You know, Southdale in particular was treated as this
kind of second coming.
One of the amazing things is that Jane Jacobs went out
to Edina to see Southdale and wrote this like very glowing
write-up of it in Architectural Forum.
And if you think about our stereotype of Jane Jacobs,
she was all about the city,
she was all about like small business.
But at that moment, it was really seen as an important new element or important new tool for
creating, you know, urbanism in the suburbs. The outside of shopping malls is really boring. They're just like these big gray boxes when you see them from the road. But all the design thinking goes into the inside of the mall with things like fountains
and atriums.
Why is that?
I think that's where the community idea, this kind of utopian community idea from the Gruin
inception of the mall really continues.
Because if you're in a space that just makes you want to shuffle along, like say an airport
terminal, you don't want to stay there.
But if you're in a space where there's beautiful natural light and maybe there's a fountain
that your kids can throw pennies into, or maybe there's a bench so you can like take
a little break in between going from store to store, you're gonna stay there longer. And so even if mall owners stopped paying money
for architectural features on the outside,
they still spent a lot of time investing
in architectural features and the upkeep
of those features on the inside.
There's a whole dialogue around maintenance
related to the mall.
And I think if you look at some pictures of dead
and dying malls, like one of the first things you see
is like the plants dying, or they've taken all of the plants
out of the planters, or there aren't enough trash cans
anymore.
And so part of the allure of the mall is of this beautiful
and beautifully maintained indoor space
that you can go to at any time
and the weather will always be perfect.
And so like that's where the money goes
and that's where I think some of the artistry goes.
And I mean, the title of my book is Meet Me By The Fountain
because that's also how people orient themselves in malls.
Right? Like Meet Me By The Blue Fountain,
Meet Me By The Red Fountain, you know. The mall can be a confusing and kind of like jangly place,
but these perpetual architecture features help us orient ourselves.
After the mall is introduced and it sort of like begins to replicate, then we hit the
building boom for malls in the 70s and 80s and then they really begin to change the landscape
of America.
Could you talk about that time and the sort of rise of the giant mall?
The early malls a lot of times are really quite simple.
It's just like that I shape or a T shape or a V shape with like one or two or three department
stores.
And the reason you're going to the mall is to shop, to go to the department store, to
maybe get a snack in a snack bar.
The food court doesn't actually become part of the mall until the mid 1970s.
And then in the 1980s,
you begin to get the first wave of boredom with the mall.
Like people are kind of over the mall.
And that's when John Jertie comes in, this LA architect,
and he's like, okay, how can we get people
to want to go to the mall again?
I know we'll put an amusement park
in the middle of the mall.
And once you put an amusement park
in the middle of the mall, it gets exponentially bigger.
And did every mall kind of react in this way?
Like I know there's some key ones like Mall of America
that has a roller coaster, an aquarium,
and stuff like that.
Did that effect kind of ripple out into other malls or was it really just confined to a
few big ones?
The entire amusement park in the mall is really confined to just a few large ones.
But the entertainment idea does ripple out.
I mean, you get more and more ice skating rinks in malls.
You get bigger and bigger food courts and they get more expressive
architecture so that like going to the food court is kind of an event and there are more
and more different kinds of cuisines that you can sample. You also get arcades added
to malls. So the offerings of malls get broader and broader, and just their square footage gets bigger and bigger.
Those malls also are a bigger investment
for their developers.
So they're trying to pull from a larger and larger area.
So whereas the original malls were really
just trying to serve the suburbs all around them
and their quadrant of the city, these new malls
are generally referred to as super regional malls.
So they are malls that people would really travel to.
When you had to get your prom dress,
you and your friends would like get in the minivan
and go to the mall that was like one or two hours away
because it had the bigger, better department stores.
And you'd spend a whole day there.
And it's just a different mentality about shopping
and it's a slightly different relationship
to the mall itself.
This is the San Dimas Mall,
and this is where people of today's world hang out.
Get in, loser, we're going shopping.
Let's go to the mall today
I went to the mall with a couple of friends I had a whole week to allowance to spend You know, in the 80s during this growth in heyday, the cultural ascendancies of malls,
there's a real conflict about the mall as a public space versus a private space.
Can you talk about why that's important
and what is happening inside of a mall
that's different than what would happen
if this was a shopping district in a city?
As you can tell from the whole mall history,
like, there's been this desire to cast the mall
as a community space and hence as a public space,
to pretend, at least for a minute,
that it's welcoming to everybody, that anyone can go there at any time.
But as the malls become bigger and actually start to serve as those de facto public spaces, you run up against the fact that store owners, mall owners,
don't really want all the things that can happen in a public space to happen
in their mall.
And the principle one of those is protests.
So there start to be this whole series of court cases, basically arguing over whether
you can protest in a mall.
And the protests that end up serving as the basis for these cases in both the state and
federal Supreme Court are over a whole range of issues.
Some of them are anti-war protests, some of them are anti-fur protests, some of them are
union protests.
But in each case, the mall owner asserts that they have the right to eject the protesters
from their property because they are not property,
they don't have to follow free speech rules.
And then you get attorneys arguing
that if malls are gonna be replaced downtowns,
shouldn't they also have to operate like downtowns
and let whoever wants to have free speech,
have free speech in these properties.
One of the earliest cases in 1968,
Thurgood Marshall goes before the US Supreme Court
and argues for the majority.
And there's this great passage where he basically talks
about how the mall has replaced downtown.
And I was so fascinated to find that A,
it was Thurgood Marshall and B,
that he had really articulated the way
that Moll's had taken on this public role as early as 1968
in a Supreme Court opinion.
After that decision, the court gets more and more
conservative, and the assertion of free speech rights in Moll's
actually gets eaten away until it becomes a state issue.
And now, that know, that's something
that's actually decided state by state.
One of the most recent protests in malls
that became a court case was a Black Lives Matter protest
at the Mall of America right before Christmas.
During one of the busiest shopping weeks of the year,
the Mall of America has caught up
in a legal battle with protesters.
Four leaders of Black Lives Matter
say they received letters on Friday threatening arrests
if Wednesday's rally takes place as planned inside the mall.
They're trying to force us to say something that, you know, they don't really have the
authority to do so.
This is definitely not only an attack on Black Lives Matter, but on everybody's First Amendment
rights and the right to speak out. The protesters like marched in chanting and all of the screens that were installed in
the mall around all of these Christmas trees lit up with messages that the protesters had
to leave. So it was kind of like you're ruining our like commercial display for Christmas
with your protests. You have to think about why did the Black Lives Matter protesters choose the Mall of
America?
They chose it because there would be people there.
There's no point in a protest if you're not going to have people see you and join you
and have media coverage.
So in a place like Minneapolis in the winter, the concentration of people were going to
be at the mall
and that's why they wanted to protest there.
And I think that's really the rub
of all of these court cases.
Like if you've evacuated your city
and put all of your commercial development in the suburbs,
you have to leave space in the suburbs
for things to happen that aren't only commercially motivated,
like aren't okay with store owners that everybody doesn't agree with.
We're past the heyday of the mall now.
How many malls have closed and are malls actually dying off?
Or like, what are the numbers like? At their peak there were approximately like 2,000 enclosed malls in the U.S.
I think that number went down to about 1,500 you know over the past 10 years and people
are expecting us to end up like after the pandemic probably around like 800 enclosed malls.
after the pandemic, probably around like 800 enclosed malls. In the 1990s, which was basically peak mall,
there were 140 new malls being built per year.
But in 2007, there were zero new malls that were built.
People aren't wrong that the mall is dying.
Like there is gonna be this huge die-off,
but I don't think the mall is going away.
I mean, 800 is still still a lot of malls.
And many of those are really the big marquee malls
in their towns.
In the New York area, it's things
like King of Prussia outside Philadelphia,
or the mall at Short Hills in New Jersey,
or the Westchester up in Yonkers.
So the richest malls are surviving.
It's really what are typically referred to as Class B and C malls that might have had
Sears and other department stores that have now gone out of business that are dying.
And so those are the ones that people film
like depressing glamour shots at and also the ones
that are potential sites for adaptive reuse.
Why, what do you cite is the reason for malls closing?
It's a whole bunch of things.
We've had this kind of panicky story for years
that online retail was gonna destroy
bricks and mortar retail. It's actually only 21% of retail
sales even now. And the pandemic has accelerated that
because more people were doing more internet shopping and, you
know, found out that that can be great for a lot of things. But
there are still many kinds of shopping that are really better
done in person. And even before the pandemic, internet
shopping hadn't killed off bricks and mortar retail at the rate that initial dire predictions
said it would. So that's part of it. There are also just larger changes in the way we
shop. Department stores are no longer the arbiters of taste that they used to be, and more people want
to shop in smaller stores, even if those aren't necessarily independently owned. And then there's
also just a greater income disparity. During the rise of the malls, the American middle class was
doing well and growing. And now there is this great disparity between like the upper middle
class that's still doing great and the lower middle and working class who have
less and less money. And people in those families are much more likely to shop in
big-box stores and discount stores because they don't really have the
income for a kind of the middle-range stores that used to be the bread and
butter of the mall.
It's funny because today there are lots of malls that are now home to employment offices
and DMVs.
And in a way that's super cool because that's the mixed use idea that was closer to Gruen's
original design of the mall.
But you write that it's usually a bad sign for the mall when this happens because they've probably given the DMV cheap rent because they're desperate to draw people
in. So I mean, this is kind of ironic.
Yeah, I mean, that should be a good thing. I think having a DMV and other public services
inside a mall would be great. Like think how convenient that would be if you have limited
time on a weekend, you can get all of these things taken care of.
And in fact, in the conclusion of my book, I talk about the malls in some other countries,
including the Philippines, where many of the malls have a lot of public services just folded
into them as a matter of course.
My mother volunteers for the Friends of the Durham Public Library and they run a used
bookstore and it was one of the businesses in an empty storefront
in Northgate Mall in Durham before it closed.
So again, city services come in where commercial businesses
don't want to pay rent anymore.
It's hard for malls to recover from one of their anchored
department stores' clothing unless something else big comes in.
Is there a way for struggling malls to recover?
Is there a formula that actually works?
Some malls have been saved or at least stabilized
by things like trampoline parks coming in.
Again, like that's the entertainment venue.
One of the ways that I think malls can survive
in the future is through smarter and perhaps
more distinct curation of the mall stores.
I mean, you know, I know that curation is kind of an overused term, but I think for
a long time, malls are getting by on essentially all having the same mix of stores and restaurants, just at different price points.
So you'd kind of decide how much money you wanted to spend that day and go to that mall.
But going forward, it's easy enough to get inexpensive chain store clothing online.
So malls could really distinguish themselves by stocking themselves with things that are
all for families.
Or I have a couple of examples in the book where malls have turned themselves essentially
into like ethnic food and business centers, depending on like the changing nature of their
suburb.
So, you have like a Latino mall outside Atlanta, or a lot of Asian malls in
Northern California that have businesses that are familiar to people from other
places but also that they can't get somewhere else and which sell
things that they can't get online.
When malls do fail and they do close, There's like thousands and thousands of square feet going unused. But you know there aren't a lot of mall shape things that you can
put in there after one is gone. What happens with these dead malls? Well a lot
of times they just sit there for quite some time because not only do they have
these many thousands of square feet that not a lot of entities can deal with, but often they're owned by multiple entities.
And so it's not as easy as just like one person selling the mall to one other person.
There have been some cases of adaptive reuse where a new business or something has taken
over a dead mall.
What is the most interesting example of that that you've seen?
Highland Mall outside Austin, Texas
has been turned over the past decade plus
into the leadership campus for Austin Community College.
And they turned one of the former department stores
into like this huge room full of computers,
like workshop space.
And they have turned one of the other department stores into the headquarters for Austin Public
TV with a lot of internal studio and recording space and an auditorium.
And the parking lot around the mall,
some of it they've actually made green open spaces
sort of like a regular college campus
and around the perimeter they're building housing,
some of which can be student housing
but other of which can just be affordable rental apartments.
It's great if we could reuse these dead malls in some way.
People always say that the greenest building is a building that's already built. apartments. It's great if we could reuse these dead malls in some way. Like people
always say that the greenest building is a building that's already built. How do
you feel about it when it comes to reusing malls? I love to see these
examples of adaptive reuse. Like when people talk about adaptive reuse they're
often thinking about older buildings in cities but at this point malls are older
buildings. I mean like many of, malls are older buildings.
I mean, like many of the malls that we're talking about that are failing are 50 years old.
And I was actually talking to the Chancellor of Austin Community College, and he was saying
that lots of people have like very poignant family memories of things that happened in the food
court at that mall.
These buildings aren't just buildings in their communities.
They're like, A, they're very conveniently located, B, like everyone knows where Highland
Mall is because it's been a reference point.
And we shouldn't just kind of throw away those memories and throw away that kind of name recognition along with like getting rid
of the tremendous like environmental sink of the building materials.
So I really see the malls as an opportunity and I would love for people to get more creative
about what to do with them.
There's a lot of like dead mall photography,
which I think can be very beautiful,
but it also kind of fixes them in people's minds
as these dead entities.
And I think kind of like stops the mental process
that it takes to then think of, okay,
like what are we gonna do with it next?
And I mean, I guess coming from a design background,
I just see them as an opportunity and a problem
and something that could be really fun to think about
and something that shouldn't be depressing.
But it's like, oh, actually, there's
all this new free land in cities.
What can we do with it?
["The New World"]
Well, this has been so great.
I've really enjoyed the book too.
It was just so much fun to both like learn a lot of stuff and also like have all this
information slot into my own sort of like lived experience of a mall.
I appreciate it.
Thanks for having me.
Alexandra Leng's book is called Meet Me By The Fountain, an inside history of the mall.
And if you buy the book, which I highly recommend, and you flip it over and look at the back
cover, you will find that someone has written, it's an architectural page-turner.
This insightful, witty, and smart book captures everything compelling and confounding about
the American mall.
Roman Mars, co-author of The 99% of Visible City.
I wrote that for the back of this book.
That's how much I believe in this book.
You should get it.
That episode was produced by Chris Berube, fact-checked by Liz Boyd, music for both stories
by Swan Riel.
This whole episode was produced and remixed by Martin Gonzalez, who actually grew up in
Providence.
He was scooping ice cream at the Ben & Jerry's and the mall's food court in 2003.
All while this was happening,
yet somehow was completely unaware of it
until he heard the original 99PI story.
Kathy Tuas, our executive producer.
Kurt Kolstad is the digital director.
D'Laney Hall is our senior editor.
The rest of the team includes Jason DeLeon,
Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Ley,
Lashma Dawn, Joe Rosenberg, Kelly Prime,
Jacob Medina Gleason, and me Roman Mars.
The 99% of his logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the SiriusXM podcast family now headquartered six blocks north in the
Pandora building.
InBeautiful.
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Oakland, California.
You can find us on Blue Sky as well as our own Discord server. There's a link to that as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.