Tuesday, June 27, 2006

SouthPark Mall

Charlotte, North Carolina - 1969

I recently shared a cool photo of the fountain in SouthPark Mall. Well, here's a shot of that same fountain, in color, as it was being built in 1969! Great historical photo that was kindly sent to me (along with a few other gems) by Pat Richardson. Thanks very much Pat! :)

SouthPark fountain circa 1970

History: 1970 - present
Current website: Here.
Current aerial view
Previous entries: 1



7 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well this will never be a dead mall, The Mall looks nothing like these photos (it's bigger by say several football fields), It's really a useless mall, the food court is so~so, no arcades and most of all if you don't fit in (dress in overpriced cloths ie) security will hound you all the time. So be white, very wealthy and act smug because thats the only way you'll enjoy it there. I prefer carolina place myself! People are always getting mugged and car jacked there which is ironic it being in the nice side of town. The malls biggest anchor store to my knowledge is and forgive the spelling nordstram And I think there is a macies there now as well.

Tue Jun 27, 06:14:00 PM  
Blogger Livemalls said...

With all due respect to moose's comments, I wholheartedly disagree with his assesment of SouthPark.

Other than getting busted for taking pictures once or twice and a couple other incidents, I've never been seriously disrespected in SouthPark. And I'm not white, rich, or smug (OK, maybe a little smug)

Also, the stores aren't any more overpriced than any other mall. They have a different level of stores that the typical mall, but it's no higher when you compare apples to apples.

The largest anchor store at SouthPark is Belk. Nordstrom is actually the second-smallest in the mall, just above Neiman-Marcus.

How could anybody prefer Carolina Place? Other than the main hallway's curving skylight, there is no "there."

Tue Jun 27, 09:41:00 PM  
Blogger Simon Templar said...

Looks like they had water in the center court during its first decade or so. In 1976 there's no more water around the fountain.

I personally like water and plants in malls. The coolest one has to be "The Mill" which had a realistic creek with lots of plants - and a old mill, of course in the mall center court. Almost makes you feel like you are outside.

Any plans on sharing some photos of this mall, Keith? It's gone now btw.

http://members.aol.com/MVNick/malls.htm

Wed Jun 28, 03:07:00 PM  
Blogger Scott Parsons said...

The early photo of the fountain being built is classic! Love it.
And hey, you have a legal right to take photos in a mall. In fact, you can take a picture of anything or anyone you want, legally. As long as you don't use the photo for financial gain (such as, sell it for money). I, too, have been busted for HOLDING my camera. Totally rediculous. I'm a 130 lb weakling holding a camera towards Macy's. They claimed I was a terrorist.

Thu Jun 29, 05:16:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Actually, what you can and can't do at a mall is a legal gray area, since it's a public forum that is privately owned. The PruneYard Shopping Center Supreme Court decision allows essentially allows states to enact laws protecting free speech on private shopping center property. After the decision, the California State Assembly passed a law that allows free speech with limited restrictions in parts of shopping centers normally open to the public.

Most states don't have such laws, however, so mall security has the right to pretty much tell you what you can't do. And I don't know if taking pictures would ever qualify as protected speech anyway. Also, a lot of the design elements of store displays have copyright or trademark protection. (That's usually why they don't want you taking pictures there. You could easily be on a sort of industrial espionage expedition for the competition.)

All that said, I've been known to take pictures inside malls myself, but I'm pretty discreet and know I wouldn't have a legal leg to stand on if they asked me to stop.

Fri Jun 30, 01:39:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I wonder whether the whole court was supposed to be water-filled. Supposedly there's a mall in Kansas City with a court that does this - I was told it has a fountain but, at certain times, the court floor is automatically filled up. Yes, i know this is likely hearsay BS, as it's entirely implausible, but...

As much as the bowl here looks different, I wonder whether during construction, rain fell in the uncovered skylight holes and filled up the courtyard, and someone thought it looked pretty and snapped a photo.

I'm unsure on the fountain, too - the one in Winter Park Mall has water falling in streams, from notches in the rim of the upper basin (I'd bet money that the basin isn't full of water, it simply has a trough around the outer edge) but these streams look too vertical and too perfect. I wonder if it's a water curtain. Water curtains have been shown in other mall photos here - some were cylinders of various sizes (with blacklights in the planter to make the fluorescent dye-tinted water glow) and one, in a Florida mall, forms a conical shape. They're approx. 1/4" dia. flexible clear (plastic?) lines strung between a water source and a pool. The lower ends are kept separated by a plastic spacer bar with slots cut in it, and metal weights, held by a knot tied in the line or "lace", keeps them taut. Water sheets down them, looking like a sleeker version of an oil-filled raindrop lamp. they're still made today, though I'm not sure where one can be seen - PEM Fountain of Canada makes parts to assemble them, though.

Sun Nov 05, 08:36:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

^ This is the mall you are talking about: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metro_North_Mall

Tue Mar 11, 08:10:00 PM  

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