From Mall Rats to Street Rats
There’s a particular kind of fluorescent-lit nostalgia attached to the American mall: the food court, the arcade in the basement, the kid behind the Orange Julius counter who was your friend’s older brother.
There’s a particular kind of fluorescent-lit nostalgia attached to the American mall: the food court, the arcade in the basement, the kid behind the Orange Julius counter who was your friend’s older brother. For about forty years, the mall was the default place American teenagers existed in public. Now it’s increasingly a place they’re escorted out of by security guards checking IDs at the door. Understanding how we got from one to the other says less about retail real estate than it does about what happened to teenage life itself.
The enclosed American mall traces back to Southdale Center in suburban Minneapolis, which opened in 1956. Its architect, Victor Gruen, was trying to recreate something he missed from prewar Europe: the bustling town square, climate-controlled and relocated to the American suburb. It worked almost too well. By the 1980s there were roughly 2,500 enclosed malls across the country, and they had become the default third place for an entire generation — somewhere between home and school, with none of the supervision of either.
What made the mall function as a teen habitat rather than just a shopping venue wasn’t any single feature — it was the density of ongoing relationships it forced on you. It employed teenagers directly: the food court counters, the mall-chain clothing stores, the movie theater, the arcade — classic first jobs, the place a 16-year-old learned what a paycheck and a dress code felt like, answerable to a manager who’d remember their name. It was where you ran into the same friend group every weekend, where the security guard recognized you from last month, where the kid working the pretzel stand was someone you went to school with, where you might be trying to impress someone you had a crush on and would see again next Saturday whether it went well or not. None of these relationships were especially deep on their own. But stacked together, they meant a teenager at the mall was rarely anonymous. Someone was going to remember how you behaved, and you were going to be back. The mall wasn’t well-behaved because teenagers were inherently better-behaved in 1985 — it was well-behaved because almost everyone there had something to lose by acting badly in front of people they’d see again.











































