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Horton Plaza, the iconic downtown San Diego shopping center opened in 1985 by mall pioneer Ernest Hahn, is to be redeveloped into a mixed-use center with offices and ground-floor retail and restaurants, according to published reports.
Future owner Stockdale Capital Partners, which currently is in escrow on the Westfield-owned property, is set to convert the 900,000-square-foot center into a work-play destination for thousands of office workers and nearby residents, reports The San Diego Union-Tribune.
Hahn envisaged the mall as a rebuke to charges that all shopping centers looked the same, notes Nancy E. Cohen, in her book America’s Marketplace: The History of Shopping Centers. It “combines disparate elements to create surprise, excitement and a sense of discovery: enclosed and open spaces; promenades that are alternatively narrow and wide; staggered levels of varying heights, as in a terraced European hill town; a whimsical pastiche of dozens of colors; and architectural references to scores of other buildings,” Cohen wrote.
“I wanted to build a center so special that it would offer a great human experience and just out-compete every other center ever built. I wanted an eccentric street setting with outdoor ambience”
A statue of Hahn, who died in 1992, stands in front of the center.
“I wanted to build a center so special that it would offer a great human experience and just out-compete every other center ever built,” the late Jon A. Jerde, who designed the center, told Cohen. “I wanted an eccentric street setting with outdoor ambience.”
By Edmund Mander
Director, Editor-In-Chief/SCT
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