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_Yoshi_ (a group admin) says:
07 Apr 08 - Hello, people. Well they're going to tear down Midtown (at least part of it.)

I've got mixed feelings. My primary reaction, though, is WE MUST PHOTOGRAPH THIS.

Let's get it before it's gone.

Important Update: Midtown Plaza will officially close to the public on August 1.
Beginning June 30, closing of the Chase and Xerox skyways.
Parking garage will be closed on September 30 for asbestos removal

Discussion 15 posts |  Only members can post. Join?

Title Author Replies Latest Post
After all we have been through with the Midtown Project... midtownmallrocs 2 45 months ago
Please read this immediately - closing date for Midtown Plaza has changed!!! midtownmallrocs 0 48 months ago
Clock of the Nations tommasz 7 48 months ago
New websites that honor our past shopping malls midtownmallrocs 0 48 months ago
Midtown Rochester Rising >dannybusch< 1 48 months ago
Midtown Plaza Merry Tuba Christmas >dannybusch< 1 49 months ago

About Midtown Plaza

From the D&C:

October 16, 2007 2:50 pm — As soon as fall 2011, the largely vacant Midtown Plaza will be gone, replaced by the new world headquarters for one of the area’s fastest growing companies.
Gov. Eliot Spitzer announced this morning that telecommunications firm PATEC Communications will put up a high-rise where Midtown is now.

Check out the Malls of America blog - they've got video!

From Wikipedia:

Midtown Plaza is a shopping mall in downtown Rochester, New York.

Designed by Victor Gruen, Midtown Plaza was dedicated on April 10, 1961 as the first downtown indoor mall in the United States. The first enclosed shopping center had been Southdale Center 1956, also designed by Gruen. The idea for this mall started with discussions between Gilbert J.C. McCurdy, owner of the McCurdy's department stores and Maurice F Forman, owner of the B. Forman Co. department stores. At this time strip plazas were growing in popularity. Though both owners had opened branch stores they were concerned about downtown Rochester's viability and came up with the idea of an indoor shopping center.

Gruen was at the height of his influence when Midtown was completed and the project attracted international attention. City officials and planners from around the globe came to see Gruen's solution to the mid-century urban crisis. Midtown won several design awards.

Gruen described the aerial view of Rochester as a giant parking lot with a few buildings to inconvenience traffic flow. His intention was to create a pedestrian friendly town square for Rochester, NY, a medium sized city near the mouth of the Genesee River. He incorporated art, benches, fountains, a four hundred seat auditorium and a sidewalk cafe into his plans hoping to encourage the sort of social intermingling that he saw as the enriching essence of urban life.

Later in life Gruen dismissed the strictly commercial suburban malls as "those bastard developments" but continued to hold Midtown in high regard. It is probably the project that most closely followed his plan and shared his civic vision.

In addition to the shopping center, the Plaza also includes a skyscraper office building.

Midtown was economically vibrant into the early eighties when suburban shopping malls opened outside of the city. Surrounded by high pockets of poverty, Midtown has struggled to keep tenants since then. Midtown's struggles increased in the mid-1990s when the mall's two anchors, McCurdy's and Forman's, closed in 1994. Their closing was quickly followed by the closing of the Midtown branch of a regional high end grocery chain, Wegmans.

Midtown, once considered the sign of a new urbanism, was placed on the list of 2002 Empire Zones.

Current tenants include Peebles department store, Radio Shack, Payless Shoes, some downscale clothing stores, a dollar store, a record store, a jewelry store, a gift shop and a US post office.

Each Christmas, Midtown Plaza brings in one of the tallest indoor Christmas Trees in the area. The mall also sets up an indoor monorail ride for children 10 and under.

Midtown Plaza is also famous for its Clock of Nations. The clock, which represents 12 nations, has 12 cylinders each with a scene with puppets for each nation. Considered a significant piece of art when it was unveiled, the original puppetry was not well maintained and was replaced in the mid-70's with the work of a local housewife.

Located directly underneath Midtown Plaza is a three level, 1,843 space parking garage.

Former Anchors

* B. Forman Closed 1994
* McCurdy's Closed 1994
* Wegmans Closed 1995

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