the 700000 square foot mall had the capacity to host four anchor stores and 100 smaller shops

Seph Lawless





The American suburb has gone through some huge changes in the last few decades.

Malls, once a place for suburbanites to spend their downtime, have suffered in the wake of the retail apocalypse, and many have shut down.

Suburban real estate and golf courses have also evolved in recent years.



In March 2017, Business Insider reported a series of stories on "The Death of Suburbia," declaring the end of the suburbs as we once knew them.

By examining the plummeting value of McMansions, the increasingly blurry line between city and suburb, and the shuttered shopping malls across the nation, we saw that the once-flourishing suburbs were no longer what they used to be.

Ahead, see a collection of photos from Seph Lawless and Business Insider reporters, showing the relics of America's suburban past. Some of these structures are now abandoned while millennials move forward with alternative ways of living.

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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