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A world-famous architect just opened a $300 million suburban mall in the middle of a retail apocalypse

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City Center Bishop Ranch

  • The firm of renowned architect Renzo Piano — the man behind the new Whitney Museum and New York Times building — just unveiled a $300 million shopping center in the San Francisco Bay Area.
  • The project opens amid a fraught time for retail stores, which are shuttering across the country.
  • The shopping mall represents a new vision of transforming suburban land into urban-inspired, mixed-use spaces.

More than three years ago, Italian architect Renzo Piano attached himself to an unusual project: A $300 million suburban shopping center in the San Francisco Bay Area. At the time, shopping malls were already on the decline, with retail sales beginning to plummet and many stores being forced to shutter their doors. 

Things have only gotten worse since then.

2017 ushered in what many have dubbed a "retail apocalypse," with big-box stores like Macy’s, JC Penney, and Sears closing hundreds of sites and companies like Payless filing for bankruptcy. By April 2018, Business Insider determined that more than 3,800 stores would close in the United States by the end of the year.

None of this seems to have fazed City Center Bishop Ranch, the brainchild of the Renzo Piano Building Workshop, which welcomed its first round of visitors in November. At 300,000 square feet, the mall includes 70 stores and restaurants, along with a luxury cinema and outdoor areas for performances and art exhibits.

The intent is to bring urban-inspired, mixed-use spaces to the suburbs — a trend that's become increasingly popular among today's developers and planners.

Take a look at the inspiration for the site, and what it looks like now.

The center's open-air square resembles an Italian piazza, providing space for community members to socialize.

According to Antonio Belvedere, a partner at the Renzo Piano Building Workshop, the square is the most important design element. "Everything is designed around the piazza," he told Business Insider.



Unlike the stucco malls that are closing across the country, Renzo Piano gave the complex a modern industrial feel that includes shimmering stainless steel and transparent glass.

The glass on the ground gives the impression that the center is floating.



The two largest tenants are Equinox and a luxury cinema called The Lot.

Equinox has become a fixture of urban developments like New York City's Hudson Yards or suburban mixed-use projects like Orange County's Pacific City.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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