East India Mall: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
The Parking Garage next to it was developed to be aesthetically linked to the mall. Accommodating up to 1,000 vehicles, the four level structure harkens back to the International Style architecture of the 1940's. | The Parking Garage next to it was developed to be aesthetically linked to the mall. Accommodating up to 1,000 vehicles, the four level structure harkens back to the International Style architecture of the 1940's. | ||
The East India Mall name was changed to Museum Place Mall. | |||
Line 14: | Line 16: | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
[http:// | Vertical File in Salem Collection - '''Museum Place Mall''' | ||
[http://evergreen.noblenet.org/eg/opac/record/2264429?locg=63 Architecture in Salem] by Tolles, p. 78-9 | |||
"East India Mall cinema-games complex offered" ''Salem Evening News'', Jan. 27, 1982, p. 1 | "East India Mall cinema-games complex offered" ''Salem Evening News'', Jan. 27, 1982, p. 1 | ||
"Cinemas mark Salem mall's change of direction" ''Salem Evening News'', Oct. 14, 1982, p.1 | "Cinemas mark Salem mall's change of direction" ''Salem Evening News'', Oct. 14, 1982, p.1 |
Latest revision as of 10:31, 28 October 2015
This retail complex in the middle of downtown Salem was built between 1977 and 1979, contains space for fifty stores, three movie theaters, offices and restaurants. Situated in the Essex Street Mall, the building is a "forceful visual statement of the New Formalism, in that the roof-line is level, the arch motif is prominent, the principal facade is symmetrical, the column supports are thick and modeled" according to Tolles in his Architecture in Salem book.
In 1982, with the mall struggling for business, Sack Theatre Corp. opened a three-cinema/video game, parlor complex inside the East India Mall. This was a new venture for the Sack Corporation which intends to run so-called "art" films instead of commercial first-run movies.
The Parking Garage next to it was developed to be aesthetically linked to the mall. Accommodating up to 1,000 vehicles, the four level structure harkens back to the International Style architecture of the 1940's.
The East India Mall name was changed to Museum Place Mall.
See Also
Vertical File in Salem Collection - Museum Place Mall
Architecture in Salem by Tolles, p. 78-9
"East India Mall cinema-games complex offered" Salem Evening News, Jan. 27, 1982, p. 1
"Cinemas mark Salem mall's change of direction" Salem Evening News, Oct. 14, 1982, p.1