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Victor Gruen wanted shopping malls to be beautiful European squares

11 October 2025 By Avinash Meetoo Leave a Comment

The Marktplatz (Hallstatt, Austria), courtesy of My Path In The World

Victor Gruen was born Viktor Grünbaum in Austria on 18 July 1903. In 1941, he moved to Los Angeles in the US and he became a pioneer in the design of shopping malls. He passed away on 14 February 1980.

His vision for a shopping center was inspired by the beautiful European squares, typically those in Vienna. A Redditor, Engelberto, explains:

“I believe his starting observation was that the new suburbs all lacked a center – a commercial, cultural, social center. His idea of a mall would give those places a center. A modern, indoor interpretation of an old world town core. Where people would meet and where cultural events and the like could be held. It would look very different from a European city but it would serve the same functions that he felt were missing in surburbia. The main problem was that mall investors would remove from the plans anything that was not commercial and would serve to maximise revenue. Any added value that could not be expressed in numbers was seen as superfluous.”

Victor Gruen really wanted Americans to experience what he, when he was in Vienna, had experienced: a central place where people would meet and share experiences. Unfortunately, the investors thought otherwise and only concentrated on the shopping in mall.

La City Trianon, a shopping mall, tropical island style.

This is why, today, most malls, including the ones in Mauritius, are first and foremost shopping and eating malls. There are not really places for people to meet and spend time together.

Lately, I have also noticed that many malls are very noisy. Christina and I even had to flee from one a few weeks ago because an (uneducated) animator was making way too much (stupid) noises.

Still, we are fortunate in Mauritius, because it’s a tropical island, to still have some malls which are nice for people to spend time in. Personally, I have no issue with, say, Bagatelle or Trianon. Some malls do stress me a lot though and I don’t like going there but I will not name them out of decency.

The Redditor, Engelberto, adds:

“And this kind of worked for many decades. But I wonder if the slow death of shopping malls in the last 20 years or so could have been avoided if these places offered modern shoppers more diverse reasons for going there. Something that cannot be replicated through online shopping.”

Malls are not dead in Mauritius. In fact, we had a new mall pretty much every month. But, this is not sustainable and, at one point, people, including investors, will get bored.

Interestingly, Engelberto also says that online shopping (naturally) only focusses on the shopping and completely forgoes the social aspects of going to a mall. In the future, we might all do our shopping online and people might stop seeing each other. I am not sure I want this.

No wonder Victor Gruen decided to return to Vienna when he became old and, in a speech in London in 1978, he disavowed shopping mall developments as having “bastardised” his ideas.

Southdale Center, the first shopping mall in the US and designed by Victor Gruen in 1956

(This is a repost of a post I wrote initially on my family website, Noulakaz.net, but which also belong here)

Filed Under: Art, Business, Future, News, Society, Technology

Can this be Mauritius in 2050?

9 October 2025 By Avinash Meetoo Leave a Comment

A few months ago, I used ChatGPT to generate a fictional image of Mauritius in year 2050 (i.e. 25 years from now). I used the following prompt: “Generate an image of Mauritius in 2050 based on what I have said”. Nothing less. Nothing more.

What I find interesting is that ChatGPT used all the conversations I have had with it since 2023 to come up with an image which includes:

  • Green tech-cities blending modern and Mauritian architecture
  • Autonomous transport and drone delivery
  • Solar and wind power generation
  • Green building and reforested regions
  • Creole, English and French signage (which seems to refer to online classes)

I’ll be glad to live in such a Mauritius.

What about you?

Filed Under: Art, Computing, Education, Future, News, Science, Society, Technology

We need more product people to solve major problems

8 October 2025 By Avinash Meetoo Leave a Comment

I was reading a post on Hacker News the other day on how Boeing has started working on a 737 MAX replacement following the catastrophic mistakes made when producing the 737 MAX. Basically, design decisions were made by people at the company who did not know a lot about airplanes and, consequently, the airplane was fraught with problems and had to be grounded while the many issues were being investigated.

I found the following two comments on the Hacker News thread very interesting to explain how aeronautical decisions were made by people who were not qualified:

  • First comment: “There’s a phenomena that ofter occurs with large organisations where once their markets mature, everybody who can build a product end-to-end leaves or gets forced out, leaving only people with highly specialised maintenance skillsets. The former group has no work to do, after all, so why should the company keep them around? But then if the market ecosystem shifts, and a new product is necessary, they no longer have the capacity to build ground-up new products. All those people have left, and won’t come anywhere near the company.”
  • Second comment: “To add to this & the Jobs interview – an oil industry proverb: a healthy oil company has a geologist in charge, a mature one has an engineer in charge, a declining one has an accountant in charge, and a dying one has a lawyer in charge.”

The two comments refer to a short interview by Steve Jobs where he explains why, when a company promotes sales/marketing people instead of product people, the company stops creating good products (i.e. Apple now with the macOS Tahoe debacle).

Aha! Now I understand something. Politicians are essentially sales/marketing people. For a country to work correctly, “product people” need to be given the possibility to solve the problems faced by citizens, not politicians.

Filed Under: Education, Future, News, Society, Technology

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