The view off the balcony of Deb McKernan's new apartment is a Cheesecake Factory and a big parking lot — and she's perfectly fine with that.
"I know it's going to sound corny, but if I can't have Michigan Avenue in downtown Chicago, then I'm going to have this," says McKernan, a pioneer in one of the newest trends in Twin Cities housing — the home at the mall.
Earlier this month, McKernan moved into One Southdale Place, the new, 232-unit luxury apartment building on the southeast corner of Edina's Southdale Center, the 58-year-old mall that was the nation's first enclosed shopping center.
The development of the outer edges of parking lots is being touted as a way for to suburbs shift their focus from cars to people. And it's a boon to mall owners who are able turn little-used, somewhat-neglected real estate into money-spinners. The trend is especially appealing to professionals and pensioners alike who want the conveniences of urban living without the hassles of big city life.
"Not everybody wants to live above a Taco Bell or a dry cleaner," said Lisa Moe, president of Twin Cities-based StuartCo., a partner with retail giant Simon on the One Southdale project. "And not everybody wants to live downtown."
Developers throughout the metro area are putting housing in the mall mix. In Maple Grove, the Skye at Arbor Lakes apartments are being built on a gravel fringe of the Shoppes at Arbor Lakes. And in Twin Cities Premium Outlets in Eagan, Stonebridge Construction is building 192 apartments adjacent to a Saks Off 5th parking lot.
Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group Inc., which owns Southdale and Twin Cities Premium Outlets, has already identified about 20 locations nationwide for "transformative" projects like One Southdale Place, spokesman Les Morris says.
Whether other Simon properties in the Twin Cities — the company also owns the Albertville Premium Outlets and the Maplewood Mall — will be included on this list is unclear.