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Resilient Forms of Shopping Centers Amid the Rise of Online Retailing: Towards the Urban Experience

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  • Fujie Rao

    (Melbourne School of Design, University of Melbourne, Melbourne 3010, Australia)

Abstract

The rapid expansion of online retailing has long raised the concern that shops and shopping centers (evolved or planned agglomerations of shops) may be abandoned and thus lead to a depletion of urbanity. Contesting this scenario, I employ the concept of ‘retail resilience’ to explore the ways in which different material forms of shopping may persist as online retailing proliferates. Through interviews with planning and development professionals in Edmonton (Canada), Melbourne (Australia), Portland (Oregon), and Wuhan (China); field/virtual observations in a wider range of cities; and a morphological analysis of key shopping centers, I find that brick-and-mortar retail space is not going away; rather, it is being increasingly developed into various shopping spaces geared toward the urban experience (a combination of density, mixed uses, and walkability) and may thus be adapted to online retailing. While not all emerging forms of shopping may persist, these diverse changes, experiments, and adaptations of shops and shopping centers can be considered a form of resilience. However, many emerging shopping centers pose a threat to urban public life.

Suggested Citation

  • Fujie Rao, 2019. "Resilient Forms of Shopping Centers Amid the Rise of Online Retailing: Towards the Urban Experience," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 11(15), pages 1-25, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:11:y:2019:i:15:p:3999-:d:251036
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    References listed on IDEAS

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