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The plans for a downtown
mall featured an open air plaza at the intersection of
Eighth and Idaho streets. Streets in the eight-block area around
it would be roofed and closed to traffic; many existing buildings would
be leveled to build large department stores. This view looks south
on Eighth Street, toward one of the mall entrances. The historic Boise City National Bank Building,
still standing, is on
the right. This image is from the cover of a promotional brochure published by the Winmar
Company and found in the Boise Redevelopment Agency documents collection
(MSS 250), Box 1 Folder 4. This page last changed: 12 October
2006.
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During the
1970s and early 80s, Boise, Idaho, struggled to revitalize its fading
downtown. City leaders fixed on the
idea of building a large enclosed regional shopping mall--the first such
mall in Boise--in the heart of
the downtown commercial district. The Winmar Company of Seattle was
awarded the rights to develop it. Their plans were ambitious, but never
realized. Major retailers--the large department stores that serve as anchor
tenants--never bought into the idea of a downtown mall, and the city was
forced grudgingly to approve a mall proposed by another developer elsewhere in town (closer to the
Interstate) or lose the mall completely to one of its neighboring
jurisdictions. Downtown Boise was indeed revitalized--and quite
successfully--in the 1990s, but through ways and means that preserved a
more
traditional urban form. The story of Boise's attempts to build a
mall downtown, and of its urban renewal efforts in general, is preserved
in two collections in Albertsons Library: the Boise Redevelopment Agency
documents collection (MSS 250) and in
the Charles F. Hummel "Planning Boise" collection (MSS
244). |



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