Southdale Center

Austrian-born architect Victor Gruen spent his early years in Vienna, where people interacted in lively pedestrian environments filled with shops, cafes, and street artists.

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Later, working in the U.S. after World War II, he was troubled by suburban sprawl and the social isolation it created. In his own words, he wanted to liberate American cities from “the terror of the automobile.” He envisioned “livable” and “lovable” spaces that got people out of their cars and interacting with each other.

With the commission from the owners of Dayton Department Stores for the Southdale Center in Edina, Minnesota, he got his chance. He turned the standard street-facing strip center inside-out and, in the process, introduced the formula for the first regional indoor shopping mall.

Beyond its collection of shops, Southdale Center provided a light-filled interior that he called the “Garden Court of Perpetual Spring” – a large open space with a goldfish pond and bird aviary, sculptures, and a sidewalk café. More than 75,000 people attended the grand opening.

Web Exclusive Video While Southdale Center was designed to bring vitality and social interaction to the suburbs, its influence ultimately contributed to suburban sprawl and urban decline as shopping malls displaced urban retail stores. But in Minneapolis, the urban core has been revived in recent years. Join Geoffrey Baer on a bicycle tour of the Riverfront District. Watch the story.

Gruen envisioned shopping centers such as Southdale as the core of more vibrant suburban communities, with houses, apartments, schools, and offices surrounding the mall. But it was not to be.

What Gruen didn’t anticipate was that far from bringing the cosmopolitan energy of the urban plaza to the suburbs, his innovation – and the many copycats it inspired – encouraged the very kind of sprawl he sought to mitigate. Even Frank Lloyd Wright later weighed in: he said Gruen “should have left downtown, downtown.”

Gruen returned to Austria and spent his last years in Vienna. But his Southdale Center continued to influence decades of suburban shopping malls, building momentum for suburban sprawl.