The shopping mall is both the most visible and the most contentious symbol of American prosperity. Despite their convenience, malls are routinely criticized for representing much that is wrong in America—sprawl, conspicuous consumption, the loss of regional character, and the decline of Mom and Pop stores. So ubiquitous are malls that most people would be suprised to learn that they are the brainchild of a single person, architect Victor Gruen. An immigrant from Austria who fled the Nazis in 1938, Gruen based his idea for the mall on an idealized America: the dream of concentrated shops that would benefit the businessperson as well as the consumer and that would foster a sense of shared community. Modernist Philip Johnson applauded Gruen for creating a true civic art and architecture that enriched Americans' daily lives, and for decades he received praise from luminaries such as Lewis Mumford, Winthrop Rockefeller, and Lady Bird Johnson. Yet, in the end, Gruen returned to Europe, thoroughly disillusioned with his American dream. In Mall Maker, the first biography of this visionary spirit, M. Jeffrey Hardwick relates Gruen's successes and failures—his work at the 1939 World's Fair, his makeover of New York's Fifth Avenue boutiques, his rejected plans for reworking entire communities, such as Fort Worth, Texas, and his crowning achievement, the enclosed shopping mall. Throughout Hardwick illuminates the dramatic shifts in American culture during the mid-twentieth century, notably the rise of suburbia and automobiles, the death of downtown, and the effect these changes had on American life. Gruen championed the redesign of suburbs and cities through giant shopping malls, earnestly believing that he was promoting an American ideal, the ability to build a community. Yet, as malls began covering the landscape and downtowns became more depressed, Gruen became painfully aware that his dream of overcoming social problems through architecture and commerce was slipping away. By the tumultuous year of 1968, it had disappeared. Victor Gruen made America depend upon its shopping malls. While they did not provide an invigorated sense of community as he had hoped, they are enduring monuments to the lure of consumer culture.
F. D. West to Meyer Poliakoff, January 7, 1942, PC; Longstreth, City Center to Regional Mall, 294–98; Hardwick, Mall Maker, 86–88; ''War Bond Day Set By Nation's Stores,'' NYT (May 26, 1942), 19; ''War Bond Sales in ...
17 M. Jeffrey Hardwick, Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004), p. 26. 18 Ibid., p. 39. 19 For instance, for the design of the Ciro shop the floor was made of ...
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“Too Many Malls in Singapore?” Property Guru, 19 February 2016. ... “Pay tribute to Singapore mall culture with Inokii and Roxy Records at a temporary museum this August. ... Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream.
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90 Europe, Japan, and Hong Kong: James Fallon, “First European Designer Mall in England Is a Hit,” Daily News Record, ... 92 “phobia of entering a store”: M. Jeffrey Hardwick, Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream ...
William L. Laurence, “Is Atomic Energy the Key to Our Dreams?,” Saturday Evening Post (13 Apr. 1946), 9. Laurence borrowed the metaphors from Nobel Prize for Chemistry–winner Sir William Ramsay, who used both in 1904 in Harper's ...
Jeffrey Hardwick, Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), 3. 14. Crawford, 14. 15. Victor Gruen and Larry Smith, Shopping Towns USA (New York: Reinhold, 1960). 16.
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