Imagine apartments built into what used to be department stores, (Oh, you’re JC Penny 203? I’m at Sears 106). Get those old arcades up and running. Set up meal stations at the food court. Once people actually live there, stores will start to move back in.

If I’m unable to finish my life in my own home, that doesn’t sound like a terrible option.

5 points

Can’t have residential buildings in an area zoned for commercial use.

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5 points

That is absolutely untrue. Dual zoning is very common, especially between commercial and high density residential. Some are triple zoned with light industrial as well.

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32 points

Just right click on the area and rezone it!

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3 points

meanwhile, OSM was filled with bad edits

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7 points

Never heard of mixed use?

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3 points

Sim City says no

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2 points

Should have installed Workers and Resources instead.

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2 points

There was a failing mall in the area and they renovated and added a bunch of housing and it’s doing amazingly well.

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11 points

do rezonings not happen?

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8 points

We got time to make it work.

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14 points

This sounds like such bad idea. Just demolish them.

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32 points

As a millennial I can tell you that most millennials I know wouldn’t want this but instead make it a place for none corporation and community events and such. A public place where your not forced to buy things where can just exist with others even if you have zero money and accessible to all genders and disabilities and races.

And yes retrofit part of it for people who need to get back on there feet, and homeless people.

If we could retrofit them into homeless shelters we could but it would require rebuilding mostly everything as malls are designed for stores not housing people (for instance the bathrooms are not private and not easily accessible if you live somewhere in it)

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32 points

I know it’s hard to imagine since you’ve pretty much got to pay to exist anywhere today, but malls were a place to just exist. I spent hours and hours wandering around the mall in the eighties without any money.

Expanding on the thought, it was perfectly ok to be, get this, a TEENAGER existing without any money in a mall!

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0 points

malls were a place to just exist

Not really. Malls existed because enough of the people who went there were spending enough money to make them profitable.

Yes it was permissible to go to a mall and not spend any money, and a lot of people did just that, but that doesn’t mean malls did not require most people to be spending money.

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5 points

I think not “most” but the ones that did spend spent plenty enough to make up for the rest. Maybe “most” do at least grab food at a restauraunt though.

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2 points

I have no respect for people with no shopping agenda

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8 points

In my country malls were never this. When I was young several malls, specially high end ones, banned unaccompanied teenagers during weekdays and at certain hours. Also, fuck malls with absolutely no seating or resting spaces outside of the food court. I hope they all go broke and get demolished.

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6 points

Might also depend on the timing. At least in the 90s, my area was as described, a hangout place where ambient hanging out was considered just fine because enough people bought stuff it was worth it and people behaved relatively well, or they had enough security to make that the case.

Now there’s all sorts of signs up about unaccompanied teenagers are not allowed.

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2 points

Also, fuck malls with absolutely no seating or resting spaces outside of the food court.

Sounds like EU got work to do

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12 points

Elsewhere, someone suggested that it would be necessary to take the rebuild down to the dirt to handle plumbing and the like for individual units, but I’m not sure I agree.

Generally there is significant excess ceiling height in these commercial spaces, no reason the floor couldn’t be raised throughout the space to accommodate plumbing and the like in a way that’s easily accessible for future maintenance. You still end up with 8’ ceilings (or probably rather more) throughout.

Over the years, I’ve watched a number of retail chains and malls die, sometimes suddenly and sometimes slowly. It’s continuously seemed like a huge waste to me, when conversion to residential space would be relatively easy, relatively affordable, could be funded by local gov or nonprofit, and would make a significant difference in net housing costs in a given area.

When ‘traditional’ residential developers are competing with that, and with the ability to slap down standard-sized (AKA easy) risers/walls/etc. within commercial spaces of defined sizes, a further reduction in local housing costs is likely.

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2 points

Adding a load bearing floor sounds pricey. I’d go for industrial and have the pipes exposed.

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3 points

Load bearing as in, structural? Isn’t that the existing floor? Something built over the top wouldn’t be load-bearing unless you’re talking about any walls that would go up as well. It certainly wouldn’t be holding up the ceiling or anything higher.

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13 points

In a city in my country there was an old mall that was slowly taken over by bands who used the spaces as rehearsal rooms. It gained a huge following including some local big bands and concerts. They all paid rent too. Unfortunately, early this year, they were evicted by the owner and City Hall, out of nowhere and are on its way to become airbnb’s for tourists…

Nothing new…

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16 points

Yesss, give us community spaces that are not designed around maximizing profits.

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56 points

counterargument; malls, arcades, and bookstores should come back in style because they were amazing and we don’t know what we missed until it’s gone.

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13 points

If they come back, I hope they will be more accessible on foot, with a bike, or with efficient public transit. Because if they are still surrounded by deserts of parking lots, only filled with EVs instead of ICEs, they can continue to die.

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1 point

In my country (and I think most of Europe) malls (especially those in more central areas) have underground parking, or limited above-ground parking. There is a really nice one which is connected to a big park in the back. So maybe you can replace the parking lots with apartment buildings, recreational spaces and transit infrastructure and maybe include some underground parking.

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4 points

If parts of it become residential like OP suggested, then it’ll be accessible by foot.

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3 points

It’s already a problem if they are not in the city center, as it sucks out business from the center and creates more traffic.

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20 points

They will come back as the US shifts away from car centered culture, malls thrive in Europe

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-6 points

How will shifting away from cars result in more people going to the mall? How are you supposed to get there?

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12 points

By subway. By bus. By bike. Walking. The world by and large doesn’t revolve around cars. How do you think Europeans get there?

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13 points
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Deleted by creator
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24 points

Well optimally you have 2 legs, you could use those, also public transport.

Video with more info https://youtu.be/586SO9-wWoA?si=SL-vnIV14DPwFH9I

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3 points

You have arcades in Europe?

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3 points

Yes

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23 points

Malls are sign of bad ciry planning

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5 points

No God please no. I hated malls as a child, this would be some sort of fucked up psychological torture.

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9 points

That’s ok, you can still go to Shady Pines.

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