Festival marketplace
A festival marketplace is a shopping market in the United States which uses a mix of local tenants instead of regional or national chain stores, shop stalls and common areas to energize the space, and uncomplicated architectural ornaments to highlight the goods.[1] Festival marketplaces were a leading strategy for revitalization of downtowns in American cities during the 1970s and 1980s.
List of festival marketplaces
Italicized mall names indicate that they are defunct, abandoned, or still existing but are no longer functioning primarily as a festival marketplace.
- Aloha Tower Marketplace — Honolulu, Hawaii
- Arizona Center — Phoenix, Arizona
- Bandana Square — Saint Paul, Minnesota[2]
- Bayside Marketplace — Miami, Florida
- Broadway Market – Baltimore, Maryland
- Cambridgeside Galleria — Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Canalside — Buffalo, New York
- Catfish Town — Baton Rouge, Louisiana[3]
- Church Street Station Exchange — Orlando, Florida[4]
- The Continent — Columbus, Ohio[5]
- Cray Plaza — Saint Paul, Minnesota
- Faneuil Hall Marketplace — Boston, Massachusetts
- Festival Market — Lexington, Kentucky
- Fountain Square — Nashville, Tennessee[6]
- Ghirardelli Square — San Francisco, California
- Harborplace — Baltimore, Maryland[7]
- Shoppes at Harbour Island - Tampa, Florida[8]
- Harbourside Shopping Centre – Sydney, Australia
- Jack London Square — Oakland, California
- Jackson Brewery — New Orleans, Louisiana
- Jacksonville Landing — Jacksonville, Florida
- McCamly Place – Battle Creek, Michigan[9]
- Mercado Mediterranean Shopping Village — Orlando, Florida[10]
- Navy Pier — Chicago, Illinois
- Old Post Office Pavilion[11] — Washington, D.C.[12]
- Pier 39 — San Francisco, California
- Portside Marketplace — Toledo, Ohio[13]
- Riverwalk Marketplace — New Orleans, Louisiana
- The Shops at National Place and eat at National Place – Washington, D.C.
- 6th Street Marketplace — Richmond, Virginia[14]
- South Street Seaport Festival Marketplace (Pier 17 Pavilion[15] and Fulton Market Building)— Manhattan, New York City
- Saint Anthony Main — Minneapolis, Minnesota[16]
- Union Station Mall — St. Louis, Missouri[17]
- Station Square — Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Tower City Center — Cleveland, Ohio
- Trolley Square — Salt Lake City, Utah[18][19]
- Underground Atlanta Mall — Atlanta, Georgia[20]
- Union Station — Indianapolis, Indiana[21]
- Union Station — Washington, D.C.
- Water Street Pavilion — Flint, Michigan[22]
- Waterside Marketplace — Norfolk, Virginia
- West End Marketplace — Dallas, Texas[23]
- Westfield Horton Plaza — San Diego, California
- Yamhill Marketplace - Portland, Oregon[24]
See also
References
- ^ Maitland, Barry (1990). The New Architecture of the Retail Mall. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. pp. 25–26. ISBN 1854548158.
- ^ Jossi, Frank (February 2, 2012). "Bandana Square in St. Paul". Finance & Commerce. Minneapolis, MN – via NewsBank.
- ^ McRae, Sharon (June 29, 1986). "Catfish Town two years old". The Advocate. Baton Rouge, LA – via NewsBank.
- ^ "Jacksonville's Landing will be tested by time". Tampa Bay Times. June 22, 1987 – via Newspapers.com. (Part 2 of article)
- ^ "Curious Cbus: What Was the Continent Like in Its Heyday?". 15 May 2017.
- ^ Richard Locker (September 6, 1987). "Nashville development uses private funds for its boom". The Commercial Appeal. Memphis, TN – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Baltimore Harborplace Redevelopment Project To Start in Fall 2026". CBS News. August 2025. Retrieved November 22, 2025.
- ^ "Adaptive Reuse: Tampa's Shoppes at Harbour Island". TheJaxsonmag. February 28, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2026.
- ^ "McCamly not a threat to area malls". The Kalamazoo Gazette. April 6, 1986 – via Newspapers.com. (Part 2 of article)
- ^ Denise L. Smith (June 6, 1988). "Mercado seeks out more residents". The Orlando Sentinel – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "The Old Post Office Pavilion Pavilion". WDGarch. Retrieved February 11, 2026.
- ^ Margaret Webb Pressler (September 6, 1994). "Injecting new life into the Old Post Office". Washington Post. Retrieved 2021-05-04.
- ^ Marx, Paul (2008). Jim Rouse: Capitalist/Idealist. University Press of America. p. 192. ISBN 978-0761839446.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Flegenheimer, Matt (2013-09-10). "Sadness, and Bargains, as Mall at South Street Seaport Shuts Down". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2025-05-28; Otis, Ginger Adams; Sit, Ryan (September 9, 2013). "Pier 17 saying goodbye to mom-and-pop stores, hello to upscale shops". New York Daily News. Retrieved May 28, 2025.
- ^ Mack, Linda (August 20, 2002). "Architect Benjamin Thompson remembered for St. Paul legacy - The St. Paul native's artistic conception of a lush, forested Mississippi River Valley spurred the city's return to the riverfront". Star Tribune. "Thompson designed Minneapolis' first festival marketplace , the first part of St. Anthony Main in the early 1980s."
- ^ Ray Hartmann (October 21, 2011). "St. Louis Needs a New Direction for Union Station". St. Louis Magazine. Retrieved 2023-09-05.
- ^ Rolando, Joe (October 9, 1987). "Completion of Trolley renovation expected in November". Salt Lake Tribune – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Campbell, Robert (November 18, 1986). "The man who brought you the marketplace". Boston Globe – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Underground Atlanta | Downtown Atlanta, GA". www.atlantadowntown.com. Retrieved 2023-09-27.
- ^ Ledbetter, Erik. "Rethinking Adaptive Reuse, or, How Not to Save a Great Urban Terminal". Railway Preservation News. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08. Retrieved 2007-03-04.
- ^ Blueprints Magazine Spring 1988 cover Archived 2007-04-16 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Brown, Steve (February 8, 2014). "Downtown Dallas' historic West End Marketplace eyed by developers for new hotel". Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2017-07-28.
- ^ "After the festival is over" (PDF). PublicMarketDevelopment.