
It's hard to believe that this generic strip mall stands on the grounds of what was once an architecturally fascinating example of 1950's commercialism. I had never heard of Northland Shopping Center when I was growing up in St. Louis, but I learned of the mall from
Dead Malls several years ago. There is much documentation of what was once on the site at
Built St. Louis and
B.E.L.T.
I wish I could have seen this center before it was torn down, but I was living out of town at the time of its destruction. In fairness, the occupancy rate of the new shopping center seems close to 100%, which honestly was more than could be said about the old center. Would a new re-branding and renovation of the old center have encouraged new tenants? We will never know. See it from the air
here.
A Brazilian professor is completing a book on dying retail, and wants to use one of my Northland photos. And I'm telling you what I told him:
ReplyDeleteNorthland was never a mall. It was the mall concept that killed Northland Shopping Center and the other open-air plazas like it. So calling Northland a mall is a bit like spitting on its grave.
(Oh, the drama!)
Right on. Northland was a shopping center - open air. Another example, on a smaller scale of course, is the Normandy Shopping Center, which housed Britts Department Store, a Walgreens (complete with a small lunch room), a Ben Franklin Variety Store, Normandy Bank (I still have my last bank book), Favazza Florist, a bowling alley, and -----Jewelry store (Name escapes me), among other shops. Last time I was in St. Louis, a few years back, the center was still intact.
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