Abstract

Completed in 1985, architect Jon Jerde’s (1940–2015) Horton Plaza mall is an urban fairy tale that stands as both a high point of postmodern commercial architecture and a living expression of the theories of postmodern pioneer Charles W. Moore (1925–1993). The mall, intended to revive and reinvent downtown San Diego, grew from the modernist urban planning and retail theories of shopping center pioneer Victor Gruen (1903–1980), yet presents itself in a distinctly postmodern form. Horton Plaza’s colorful architecture embodies the postmodern movement’s shift from anti-establishment origins in the academy toward its later, commercial flowering. While Jerde made his career designing malls and entertainment architecture, Horton Plaza stands apart among the architect’s work for both its visual richness and its engagement with the larger architectural discourse. In particular, the aesthetics, materials, form, and focus on placemaking demonstrated at Horton Plaza reflect the philosophies of Charles W. Moore. Horton Plaza and its place within Moore’s sprawling legacy is the focus of this thesis, which speculates about the continued impact of Moore and postmodernism’s commercial turn on today’s built environment at a moment when Horton Plaza itself faces almost certain demolition.

Details

Title
Jon Jerde’s Horton Plaza Mall: Contextual Commercialism in the Tradition of Charles W. Moore
Author
Adkisson, Kevin
Publication year
2020
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations Publishing
ISBN
9798678107060
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2452909877
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.