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Southdale Mall

Southdale Center
2009-0611-003-Southdale.jpg
View of the center court
Location Edina, Minnesota
United States
Coordinates 44°52′50″N 93°19′34″W / 44.88056°N 93.32611°W / 44.88056; -93.32611Coordinates: 44°52′50″N 93°19′34″W / 44.88056°N 93.32611°W / 44.88056; -93.32611
Address 6901 France Avenue South
Opening date October 8, 1956
Developer Dayton Company (now Target Corporation)
Management Simon Property Group
Owner Simon Property Group (50%)
Architect Victor Gruen Associates
No. of stores and services 123
No. of anchor tenants 4 (1 vacant)
Total retail floor area 1,300,000 sq ft (120,000 m2)
No. of floors 4
Website Official website
External video
2009-0611-004-Southdale.jpg
Buildings that Changed America #8 Southdale Center, WTTW,

Southdale Center, colloquially known as Southdale, is a shopping mall located in Edina, Minnesota, a suburb of the Twin Cities. It opened in 1956 and is one of the oldest fully enclosed malls, and the first climate-controlled one, in the United States. Southdale Center comprises 1,300,000 sq ft (120,000 m2) of leasable retail space, and contains approximately 123 retail tenants. The mall is partially owned by Simon Property Group and is anchored by Herberger's, JCPenney, and Macy's.

Victor Gruen, the center's architect, designed the mall to challenge the "car-centric" America that was rising in the 1950s. Since its opening in 1956, Southdale has suffered through high vacancy rates and several store closures, but has been able to recover in recent years. Several additions have been performed on the building, including a 2011 renovation which involved the construction of a brand new food court. Southdale Center continues to use much of its original structure despite these renovations, and has been the host of several charity and community events throughout the years.

Southdale Center was developed by the Dayton Company and designed by Victor Gruen, an Austrian immigrant and socialist. Gruen was a European-style socialist; he found individual stores in downtown venues to be inefficient, and the suburban lifestyle of 1950s America too "car-centric" and wanted to design a building that would be a communal gathering place, where people would shop, drink coffee, and socialize, as he remembered from his native Vienna. Southdale Center was loosely modeled on the arcades of several heavily populated European cities and purposely included "eye-level display cases" to "lure customers into stores". Gruen imaged that Southdale would eventually include "a medical center, schools and residences, not just a parade of glitzy stores." The first plans unveiled for the shopping center were announced in 1952 by Gruen and Minnesota native, Donald Dayton.


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