Festival marketplace: Difference between revisions
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* Portside, [[Toledo, Ohio]] |
* Portside, [[Toledo, Ohio]] |
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* Erie Street Market, [[Toledo, OH]] |
* Erie Street Market, [[Toledo, OH]] <ref>[http://rightwingtoledo.blogspot.com/2007/06/new-portside.html The New Portside]</ref> |
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*Sixth Street Marketplace, [[Richmond, Virginia]] |
*Sixth Street Marketplace, [[Richmond, Virginia]] |
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*Festival Market, [[Lexington, Kentucky]] |
*Festival Market, [[Lexington, Kentucky]] |
Revision as of 22:42, 21 March 2010
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2009) |
A festival marketplace is a concept of James W. Rouse and the Rouse Company in the United States to revitalize downtown areas in major cities in the late 20th century. Festival marketplaces were a leading downtown revitalization strategy in American cities during the 1970s and 1980s.
In the second half of the 20th century, Rouse and his company became major developers of suburban strip shopping centers and pioneered large shopping malls. In many cities, these were seen as escalating the failure of retail businesses and causing further deterioration of older, downtown core areas.
In the late 1970s, Rouse and his company, took on some of the inner city dilemmas their earlier work had been accused of exacerbating. Studies had shown downtown areas were often perceived as both dirty and dangerous. In response, they developed the festival marketplace concept as a way to reverse the negative trends and attract both suburban residents and out-of-town visitors to the downtown areas.
A typical festival marketplace would include local involvement in the creation of a safe and trendy attraction intended to serve as a major catalyst for other redevelopment. Generally, a festival marketplace offers major restaurants, specialty retail shops, and an international food court. Often, there is an exciting nightlife with music, dancing and live entertainment. The more successful projects seemed to benefit from waterfront locations and secure parking.
List of festival marketplaces
- Underground Atlanta, Atlanta, Georgia
- Harborplace, Baltimore, Maryland
- Faneuil Hall, Boston, Massachusetts
- Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois
- Aloha Tower Marketplace, Honolulu, Hawaii
- Jacksonville Landing, Jacksonville, Florida
- The Grove at Farmers Market, Los Angeles, California
- Hollywood and Highland, Los Angeles, California
- Bayside Marketplace, Miami, Florida
- Jackson Brewery, New Orleans, Louisiana
- Riverwalk, New Orleans, Louisiana
- South Street Seaport, New York City
- Waterside, Norfolk, Virginia
- Jack London Square, Oakland, California
- Arizona Center, Phoenix, Arizona
- Station Square, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Westfield Horton Plaza, San Diego, California
- Ghirardelli Square, San Francisco, California
- Pier 39, San Francisco, California
- St. Louis Union Station, St. Louis, Missouri
- Union Station (Washington, D.C.), Washington, D.C.
- Tower City Center. Cleveland, Ohio
Failed festival marketplaces
- Water Street Pavilion, Flint, Michigan[1]
- Union Station, Indianapolis, Indiana[2]
- Portside, Toledo, Ohio
- Erie Street Market, Toledo, OH [3]
- Sixth Street Marketplace, Richmond, Virginia
- Festival Market, Lexington, Kentucky
- Saint Anthony Main, Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Bandana Square, Saint Paul, Minnesota
- West End Marketplace, Dallas, Texas
References
- ^ Blueprints Magazine Spring 1988 cover
- ^ Ledbetter, Erik. "Rethinking Adaptive Reuse, or, How Not to Save a Great Urban Terminal". Railway Preservation News. Retrieved 2007-03-04.
- ^ The New Portside