Festival marketplace
(Redirected from Festival Marketplace)
Template:Short description A festival marketplace is a European-style shopping market in the United States. It is an effort to revitalize downtown areas in major US cities begun in the late 20th century.
Festival marketplaces were a leading downtown revitalization strategy in American cities during the 1970s and 1980s. The guiding principles are a mix of local tenants instead of regional or national chain stores, design of shop stalls and common areas to energize the space, and uncomplicated architectural ornament in order to highlight the goods.[1]
List of festival marketplaces
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- 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 (Defunct, 1980–2026)[7]
- Harbour Island - Tampa, Florida
- Jack London Square — Oakland, California
- Jackson Brewery — New Orleans, Louisiana
- Jacksonville Landing — Jacksonville, Florida (Defunct, 1987–2019)
- McCamly Place – Battle Creek, Michigan (Defunct, 1986–2019)[8]
- Mercado Mediterranean Shopping Village — Orlando, Florida[9]
- Navy Pier — Chicago, Illinois
- Old Post Office Pavilion — Washington, D.C.[10]
- Pier 39 — San Francisco, California
- Portside Marketplace — Toledo, Ohio (Defunct, 1984–1990)[11]
- Riverwalk Marketplace — New Orleans, Louisiana
- Sixth Street Marketplace — Richmond, Virginia (Defunct, 1985–2003)[12]
- South Street Seaport — New York City, New York
- Saint Anthony Main — Minneapolis, Minnesota[13]
- St. Louis Union Station — St. Louis, Missouri[14]
- Station Square — Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Tower City Center — Cleveland, Ohio
- Trolley Square — Salt Lake City, Utah[15][16]
- Underground Atlanta — Atlanta, Georgia
- Union Station — Indianapolis, Indiana[17]
- Union Station — Washington, D.C.
- Water Street Pavilion — Flint, Michigan (Defunct, 1985–1990)[18]
- Waterside District — Norfolk, Virginia
- West End Marketplace — Dallas, Texas[19]
- Westfield Horton Plaza — San Diego, California
See also
References
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". "Thompson designed Minneapolis' first festival marketplace , the first part of St. Anthony Main in the early 1980s."
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- ↑ Blueprints Magazine Spring 1988 cover Template:Webarchive
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