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In 1958 the renowned urban planning firm of Victor Gruen
Associates was commissioned to create an downtown revitalization plan
for Kalamazoo. The most important features of the plan were a
downtown pedestrian mall and a "ring" road to convey traffic easily
throughout Kalamazoo. Only the mall was implemented.
The following is an essay about Victor Gruen and the
urban plans his firm created. It originally appeared in
Delirious LA ,
http://www.deliriousla.net/essays/2000-gruen.htm , a site
concerned with architecture and planning in Los Angeles.
Locating Victor
Gruen by Alan A Loomis
reprinted with
permission of the author
"On March 23, 1959 the Kalamazoo
City Commission unanimously adopted an ordinance closing two blocks of
Burdick Street from automobile traffic. In August of that year, Burdick
Street was reopened as the Kalamazoo Mall, making this small, average
Michigan town the first city in the country to replace one of its
primary downtown streets with a landscaped pedestrian mall. During a
time when the economic health of the center city was being challenged by
growing suburbs and traffic congestion, closing a downtown street was a
radical act, closely watched by other cities. However, the significance
of Kalamazoo Mall lies not only in its status as the prototype for a
popular planning trend in the 1960s and 1970s, but also as the first
attempt to implement recommendations of a downtown revitalization plan
authored by the renowned architecture and planning firm Victor Gruen
Associates. [1]
Financed and promoted by downtown business owners, Victor Gruen's 1958
"Kalamazoo 1980" plan was the second of many downtown plans his office
would produce following the celebrated and famous Fort Worth plan of
1955. Kalamazoo, however, adopted only the pedestrian mall from all the
recommendations of the plan, as many other cities would do with their
Gruen plans. Fresno California would build a downtown pedestrian mall in
1964, based on a 1958 Gruen plan; Honolulu Hawaii would also convert two
blocks into a pedestrian mall in 1969, three years after commissioning a
Gruen plan. [2] Although he was known as the "father of the mall,"
Victor Gruen would disown his paternity. Gruen believed that simply
removing automobile traffic from a few blocks of a downtown street in
favor of pedestrians was nothing more than publicity gimmick that failed
to address fundamental functional problems with downtown cores. [3]
Essentially, the central concern addressed by Victor Gruen Associates'
urban redevelopment plans was the inability of downtown streets to
handle the postwar influx of automobiles. Car ownership exploded
dramatically in the 1950s, a result of America's postwar prosperity and
the Federal government's support of home ownership in new suburbs. The
resulting commuting patterns brought unprecedented numbers of cars into
downtowns without adequate streets or parking. Traffic congestion,
polluted streets, unfriendly sidewalks, and inefficient urban centers
were the consequence. Gruen effectively demonstrated the basic problem
of accommodating the automobile in urban planning through a series of
statistical thought-experiments, beginning with a comparison of US human
and automobile populations (125,000,000 people to 82,000,000 cars in
1964) [4] A more focused critique addressed a proposal to build fifteen
parking garages in the midst of Manhattan. Gruen's analysis compared the
amount of space required by the both parked and moving cars the garages
would generate against space on the Manhattan street grid, effectively
demonstrating through numbers alone the inability of the garages to
solve New York's transportation problem. [5] Certainly a less extreme
situation than Manhattan, Kalamazoo nonetheless suffered from similar
problems of congestion and urban decline. The "Kalamazoo 1980" plan
attempted to address these problems, although the mall, as with Fresno
and Honolulu, was merely the last phase of Victor Gruen Associates'
twenty-year implementation strategy. The Kalamazoo plan, like the
earlier Fort Worth or contemporaneous Fresno plan, circled the downtown
with a ring road that fed automobile traffic from freeways and
metropolitan boulevards into large parking lots. Removed from their
cars, downtown shoppers and workers would enter a pedestrian only
environment, defined by the former street grid. [6] The concentric
series of ring roads and parking lots in a Gruen downtown plan is
directly modeled after the open space ringstrasse of the glacis in
Gruen's hometown of Vienna. A Gruen plan was designed to protect the
vitality of the central city from an on-slaught of automobiles.
Gruen's plans for downtowns sound and look remarkably like suburban
shopping malls. Indeed, a revealing diagram in the "Kalamazoo 1980"
report overlays the plan for downtown Kalamazoo on the plan of Northland
Shopping Mall in suburban Detroit, also designed by Victor Gruen
Associates. The two plans are, of course, similar in size and structure.
This should be no surprise, insofar as Gruen Associates' experience in
urban planning began with in 1955 with Northland, widely considered the
first suburban shopping mall in the country. The Northland project
arrived at Gruen's office through the Hudson Department Store family; as
they considered expanding their operations from their massive downtown
store into the suburbs, the Hudson family turned to the country's
leading expert in retail design. Gruen's reputation for retail design
had steadily grown, beginning with small boutique shops. Gruen was able
to convince Hudsons to build not only a branch department store, but
also the adjoining retail and public spaces under a single unified
design. Northland was an instant commercial and community success. Even
on Sunday, when the stores were closed, it received visitors, who
wandered its landscaped courtyards. [7] Today, with suburban malls
failing and even being demolished, its seems difficult to imagine such a
place as a community focal point, popular for casual visiting, concerts,
and community meetings. [8] However, Victor Gruen conceived of shopping
malls as concentrations of urban activity within the automotive,
homogenous landscape of postwar American suburbia. Early malls by Gruen
Associates included post offices, day cares and other non-retail
community services. The 1961 Winrock Center in Albuquerque extended this
integration of functions even further, including offices and apartments
on the property and a hotel within the architecture and pedestrian
spaces of the mall itself. [9]
But as more stores located in shopping malls, both the building and the
parking lots began to sprawl beyond the distance of a comfortable walk.
Thus whereas Northland and Winrock Center are single story, open-air
malls, Gruen's second major mall was a two-story building focused on an
enclosed atrium. The atrium at Southdale, outside of Minneapolis
Minnesota, of course, provided the protection from the weather necessary
in the northern Great Plains, but also created an interior space
demanding sculptural, expression. Especially in suburban malls, where
the exterior façade is typically a utilitarian box facing parking lots
and interior storefronts following national standards, the atrium
provides the only moment of architectural identity. [10]
Eventually, the interior atrium of the shopping mall would find itself
within an urban mall as a component of a Gruen downtown plan. Like their
other downtown plans, the Gruen Associates' strategy for Rochester New
York proposed a variety of traffic realignments within the central city,
consisting of a freeway ring, parking garages, and various
pedestrian-only streets. Because it had initiated a downtown freeway
loop prior to commissioning Gruen, Rochester would ultimately be the
American city with the most complete Gruen plan with the opening of
Midtown Plaza in 1962. A central component of the Gruen plan, Midtown
Plaza consolidated a hotel, two local department stores and a
municipally funded parking garage under one roof. The central atrium
garden court occupied the right-of-way of Cortland Avenue, which thereby
connected the interior of Midtown Plaza to the street and the rest of
the central city. Although owing to the real estate constraints of its
downtown location Midtown Plaza had a higher density and concentration
of activity than suburban shopping malls, in nearly every respect it
conformed to the shopping mall strategy. [11] Midtown Plaza effectively
collapsed a suburban building typology within a downtown location and
effectively generated the urban mall as a new architectural and
development prototype.
As this new prototype, Midtown Plaza represents the starting point for
an interesting line of successors to Gruen's legacy. Like Gruen, the
architects that have extended and expanded his ideas share Gruen's
position between pop commercialism and high-art architectural theory.
Like Gruen, John Portman, Benjamin Thompson, and Jon Jerde have until
recently been largely ignored by the mainstream culture of architecture
schools and journals. Yet they have also produced some of the most
significant and successful urban places in the past twenty-five years.
Curiously enough, John Portman's first major hotel, the Atlanta Hyatt,
was completed in 1967, the year of Victor Gruen retired to Austria.
Continuously adding more hotels and offices to his hometown Atlanta,
Portman would follow the Hyatt with the Embarcadero Center in San
Francisco and two nearly identical hotel complexes - the Renaissance
Center in Detroit (1971) and the Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles
(1975). Portman's hotels would eventually become famous for their
soaring, Piranesian, and deeply disorientating atriums. [12] Yet located
in downtown centers, Portman's atrium hotels are clearly elaborations of
the urban mall typology developed by Gruen at Midtown Plaza. Although an
urban density was forced upon Midtown Plaza and Portman's hotels by
their central city locations, the comparable density of the Houston
Galleria was deliberate choice when Gerald Hines developed it in 1971.
Originally located in Houston's suburban sprawl, the Galleria has
undergone three expansions and is today surrounded by the office towers,
hotels, and big box retail of its Post Oak edge city neighborhood. At
the Houston Galleria, the urban mall typology has been the catalyst for
density in suburbia rather than a response to density. In the mid 1970s,
the "festival marketplace" was codified at Fanueil Hall in Boston by
developer James Rouse and architect Benjamin Thompson into the early
1980's urban renewal buzzword. Pioneered with Ghiradelli Square in San
Francisco in 1964, Fanueil Hall and its successors at New York's South
Street Seaport and Baltimore's Harborfront was a mixture of historic
renovation, adaptive reuse, and new construction, integrated by a
pedestrian only environment. Although lacking the ring roads and massive
parking lots of a Gruen downtown plan, at the scale of a few blocks
festival marketplaces nonetheless implement many of Gruen's ideas.
However, by the mid 1980's the primary innovations in downtown retail
design and planning were once again emerging from Los Angeles. With
offices on Venice Beach, the Jon Jerde Partnership began designing a
series of urban malls that incorporated the size of Portman or Gruen's
projects with the pageantry of festival marketplaces. Initiated by
Horton Plaza in downtown San Diego, Jerde's most famous and notorious
project is Universal City Walk in Los Angeles. Adjacent to the Hollywood
Freeway, yet located on the hills of the Universal Studios theme park,
City Walk is pedestrian only environment surrounded by parking lots.
Like the Houston Galleria, City Walk achieves many of Gruen's planning
goals even though it begins with a tabula rasa site. Jerde, however, has
also reinvented the downtown pedestrian mall, still, despite his
attempts to disown his authorship, commonly associated with Gruen. At
the Fremont Street Experience in downtown Las Vegas, Jerde has not only
closed the street to automotive traffic, creating a pedestrian
environment, he has also vaulted the street with a giant cinematic roof.
Although each individual casino and storefront along Freemont Street has
maintained its own identity, as they would in a typical downtown
pedestrian mall, with the vault the street becomes a single unified
space similar to the atriums of Midtown Plaza or Portman's hotels and
therefore capable of competing in the identity battles with the enormous
casinos on the Strip. The Freemont Street effectively collapses a number
of Gruen's ideas into a single project, albeit within the unusual urban
environment of Las Vegas. [13]
Although the Thompson and Rouse team remain largely unseen in recent
architectural history, both Portman and Jerde have become the focus of
recent critical interest, an effort lead by Rem Koolhaas. [14] Perhaps
his research into Portman and Jerde has lead Koolhaas to unconsciously
rediscover Victor Gruen's downtown planning ideas. The City Centre plan
for Almere, the Netherlands, authored by Koolhaas' Office for
Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) is the most Gruen-like plan produced
since Gruen's retirement. OMA has proposed for Almere the essential
elements of Gruen's Fort Worth plan: the downtown ring road connecting
major freeways with huge parking garages that access a pedestrian only
retail and office environment. [15]
Strangely enough, even Rem Koolhaas - the therapist/provocateur of
recent architectural history - seems to have overlooked Victor Gruen,
despite having rediscovered his downtown planning strategies. Yet though
he seems forgotten by critical literature and the consciousness of
architectural culture, Gruen's legacy remains strongly alive. The course
of Gruen's ideas, as implemented since his retirement, flows through
some of the most significant urban architecture since the mid century.
Ultimately, it suggests that both the problems Victor Gruen addressed
and the strategies he and his office developed to address those problems
continue to remain relevant. We have much to learn from Victor Gruen; we
need to rediscover him. "
[1] Dates for the implementation of the
Kalamazoo Mall come from The Kalamazoo Gazette, Tuesday, January 1,
1980, special edition, p 25. I learned the planning significance of the
Kalamazoo Mall years ago: it is my hometown and for two years I walked
it everyday on my way to work. I am grateful to Catherine Larson of the
Kalamazoo Public Library for locating and sending me information on the
history of the Kalamazoo Mall, including the 1958 Gruen report.
[2] The Fresno Fulton Street Mall was executed by landscape architect
Garret Eckbo's office, EDAW. See Harvey Rubenstein, Central City Malls
(New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1978) p 102-109.
[3] Victor Gruen, The Heart of Our Cities (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1964) p 222
[4] Victor Gruen, The Heart of Our Cities (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1964) p 209
[5] Victor Gruen, The Heart of Our Cities (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1964) pp 118-123
[6] Victor Gruen Associates and Larry Smith & Company, "Kalamazoo 1980"
(Victor Gruen Associates, 1958)
[7] Alex Wall lecture at SCIArc 28 March 2000
[8] Within in greater Los Angeles, Sherman Oaks Galleria and Plaza
Pasadena (the later designed in the late 1970s by Jon Jerde while at
Charles Kober Associates) are two of the malls currently being
demolished. It should also be noted that the original Hudsons in
downtown Detroit, once the largest department store in the country, was
demolished last year, after standing vacant for decades.
[9] Victor Gruen, The Heart of Our Cities (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1964) pp 195-196
[10] Margaret Crawford, "The Architect and The Mall" in Francis Anderton,
You Are Here: The Jerde Partnership International (New York: Phaidon
Press, 2000) pp 44-55
[11] Victor Gruen, The Heart of Our Cities (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1964) pp 300-320
[12] See, for example, Frederic Jameson Postmodernism, Or, the Cultural
Logic of Late Capitalism (Duke: Duke University Press, 1989) or Rem
Koolhaas, "Atlanta" in Rem Koolhaas and Bruce Mau, SMLXL (New York: The
Monacelli Press, 1996) pp 832-859
[13] Of course, The Jerde Partnership has also designed a number of the
casinos on the Vegas Strip. For a description of recent Jerde projects,
see Francis Anderton, You Are Here: The Jerde Partnership International
(New York: Phaidon Press, 2000)
[14] Again, see Rem Koolhaas, "Atlanta" in Rem Koolhaas and Bruce Mau,
SMLXL (New York: The Monacelli Press, 1996) pp 832-859, his lecture "The
Metropolis and Big Buildings" at the conference "Learning from the Mall
of America" hosted by the University of Minnesota, 22 November 1997
(cited by Margaret Crawford in "The Architect and The Mall"), or his
forthcoming studies with on shopping with the Harvard Project on the
City.
[15] See Michelle Provoost, Bernard Colenbradner, and Floris Alkemade,
Dutchtown: A City Centre Design by OMA / Rem Koolhaas (Rotterdam:
Netherlands Architecture Institute, 1999)
This essay will be revised in late 2003 to reflect recent scholarship,
including the Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping, "Post Modern or
Post-Mortem? The Kalamazoo Mall Revisited", and Mall Maker. (
see
Kalamazoo Mall Revisited )
© 2000 Alan A Loomis | Delirious LA
Note an updated essay is
planned by the author in 2007; check
www.deliriousla.net/essays
About the Author
Alan
Loomis is the Principal Urban Designer for the City of Glendale,
California. Previously he worked in Pasadena, California with Moule &
Polyzoides Architects and Urbanists, where he directed planning projects
for campuses and cities in the Los Angeles area, in addition to
participating in other urban design and research projects throughout
California, New Mexico and New Jersey. He co-edited Los Angeles:
Building the Polycentric Region, a survey of regional smart growth
urbanism and architecture, and has published essays in ArcCA,
loudpaper, among other journals. An active member of the Los Angeles
architecture community, he served on the board of the LA Forum for
Architecture and Urban Design and the local Congress for New Urbanism
chapter. He is a graduate of Portage Northern High School, and prior
moving to California worked with both Kingscott Associates and Eckert/Wordell
Architects in Kalamazoo. |