On this day in economic and financial history…
The first modern shopping mall in the United States opened its doors to the public on Mar. 22, 1954. The Northland Center, as it was known, was first devised in 1948 as a way to capitalize on the great suburban migration taking place after World War II. Designed by Victor Gruen for the Detroit-based J. L. Hudson department store, the Northland Center would be the first of several suburban developments to showcase the Hudson brand amid a number of other retail outlets.
The Northland Center was built between 1952 and 1954 in Southfield, Mich., a nearby suburb of Detroit, and it quickly attracted a lot of attention and consumer money. Its “anchor” Hudson department store alone proved the worth of the new mall model within its first year, as the store’s gross revenue was three times the cost of building the Northland Center.
A number of shopping malls opened across the country shortly after Northland, including three sister shopping centers in other inner-ring suburbs of Detroit. They kept getting bigger, as well. Three early malls in Baltimore, northern Virginia, and suburban Minneapolis reached a combined 2 million square feet in available store space, but by the 1960s individual malls were built to this size. Northland itself was an open-air ring of stores around the Hudson department store until it was enclosed in the 1970s, by which point most American malls had adopted the single-building model. Gruen also pioneered the enclosed-mall format, and his developments in this field prompted Malcolm Gladwell, author of Outliers and The Tipping Point, to proclaim him the most influential architect of the 20th century.
J. L. Hudson would later merge with Dayton’s, the department-store owner of Gruen’s first enclosed shopping mall in Minneapolis, to form Dayton Hudson. You know it today as Target Corporation (NYSE:TGT), one of America’s most notable shopping-mall anchor stores. Today, the shopping mall (or shopping center) has become perhaps the most important retail development in the country, and yet few of America’s largest corporations are dependent on it for business. In fact, none of the components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average can be considered mall-centric, although both Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (NYSE:WMT) and The Home Depot, Inc. (NYSE:HD) often serve as mall anchor stores. Instead, the products and services provided by the Dow’s megacap companies are often found on the shelves of mall retailers, building or operating mall infrastructure (including their technological infrastructure), or providing the liquidity and financial services that grease the wheels of American consumer culture.
Today, there are roughly 105,000 shopping centers of all sizes spread across the U.S., offering the American consumer more than 7 billion square feet of retail shopping space. The Northland Center, now enclosed and modernized, continues to operate to this day despite the Detroit area’s ongoing population exodus. There’s still a Target there, but ownership has passed from the modern parent of J. L. Hudson (which sold its Hudson locations to rival Macy’s, Inc. (NYSE:M) in 2006) to Jones Lang LaSalle Inc (NYSE:JLL), one of the world’s largest real-estate management companies with roughly 2.1 billion square feet under management.
“It’s All About the Pentiums”
Two-core computing products, more than any other, defined the PC era during the latter years of the dot-com bubble. One wasMicrosoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT)‘s Windows 95, which indisputably established Bill Gates as hegemon of the software world. The other was Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC)‘s Pentium microprocessors, which were first shipped on Mar. 22, 1993, two years before Windows 95 hit the market. The Pentium, named after the Greek word pente for “five,” was Intel’s fifth-generation chip and the first to be uniquely branded following a series of numeric “x86” names stretching all the way back to the 8086 in the late 1970s. It is still used to this day to identify some of Intel’s lower-end processors, although these chips are no longer based on the original Pentium microarchitecture.
The original Pentiums ran at clock speeds of 60 or 66 megahertz and used roughly 3.1 million transistors. Intel’s latest and greatest Pentiums of 2013, under the Ivy Bridge brand, run at more than 3 gigahertz (a near 50-fold improvement in clock speed) using two cores. Intel no longer lists the number of transistors on its multicore chips, but considering the fact that the transistor size has shrunk from 800 nanometers in 1993 to just 22 nanometers in 2013, there are undoubtedly dozens of times as many transistors in today’s Pentiums as there were in the original. Considering Intel’s long dominance of the PC processor market, the Pentium brand is undoubtedly one of the best-selling brands in business history. Even in 2010, dual-core Pentiums made up more than 40% of Intel’s desktop processor sales. The Pentium is also one of the few technology products to ever get its own song: “It’s All About the Pentiums” by Weird Al Yankovic.
The article The Most Important Architectural Development of the Last 100 Years originally appeared on Fool.com.
Fool contributor Alex Planes owns shares of Intel. Add him on Google+ or follow him on Twitter @TMFBiggles for more insight into markets, history, and technology.The Motley Fool recommends Home Depot, Intel, and Jones Lang LaSalle. The Motley Fool owns shares of Intel, Jones Lang LaSalle, and Microsoft.
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