SHARE
COPY LINK

SHOPPING

Gamla Stan needs a shopping mall

It's time for Stockholm to brush off the cob-webbed cobblestones of nostalgia and build a state of the art shopping mall in the historic old town, David Bartal argues.

Gamla Stan needs a shopping mall

Shopping malls have been getting bad press in the Swedish print and electronic media lately.

Indoor shopping galleries destroy the character of a funky part of town, take business away from local merchants who are already struggling to survive and they strip a historic district of its identity.

No one seems to have a good word to say for these reservoirs of elevator music and mediocre food.

“They kill the soul of a city,” a good friend told me over lunch today.

When far-sighted urban planners recently sought to construct a modern mall below the ground at the Odenplan subway station, local merchants and residents protested loudly and effectively.

Now, some 300 shops in Stockholm's inner city have formed a business network called Viva Ville (who's Ville, one wonders?) to fight back against the blossoming of huge shopping malls on another front, out in the suburbs.

Gigantic new malls in places like Vällingby, Farsta and Kista are supposedly robbing inner city shops of their customers. Members of the Viva Ville network, which include inner-city restaurants, independent boutiques, restaurants and artsy-fartsy shops, plan to counter-attack with hefty discounts.

I don't know what all the fuss is about. Personally, I think there ought to be shopping malls everywhere, as long as they offer abundant free parking. Malls and cheap housing for everybody.

Sadly, there are still parts of the renowned Swedish “open landscape” — parks and green meadows, for example — which for some reason have not yet been converted into affordable high-rise housing.

Similarly, there are large sections of the Swedish capital which do not yet enjoy the myriad benefits of fresh, new shopping malls. I am thinking in particular about the Old Town (Gamla Stan).

With its medieval cobblestone streets, narrow alleyways, ancient churches and long history, Gamla Stan is one of the most attractive and popular parts of the capital.

Dozens of coffee shops, clothing and jewelery boutiques, restaurants, souvenir stores and handicraft shops line the pedestrian-only streets. Gamla Stan has everything: everything except some good, old-fashioned competition from chains like H&M, Phone House and Burger King.

Nostalgic souls may protest the very idea of a mall in this historic district. A shopping gallery in Gamla Stan! Impossible! But why should things remain the same until the end of time? To remain a vital and growing urban center, modern cities have to grow and adapt to the needs of a new generation. One-stop shopping is the future.

This leads us to a touchy issue. Where should we build a mega-mall in the crowded Old Town? The solution is obvious.

There is plenty of room for a new shopping mecca in the spacious Royal Palace. Tourists will go wild! They can pick up a pair of Cheap Monday jeans in a Palace boutique, grab a latte at Wayne's Royal Coffee and pay a quick visit to one of three museums on the Palace grounds, including the Tre Kronor Museum that portrays the palace's medieval history and Gustav III's Museum of Antiquities.

It's a sure winner.

SHOPPING

Danish stores to remove MobilePay from payment options

Over 500 shops in Denmark will no longer offer the popular app MobilePay as a payment option after the platform ordered merchants to purchase new hardware.

Danish stores to remove MobilePay from payment options

The Dagrofa corporation, which owns chains including the Meny and Spar supermarkets, has announced it will remove MobilePay as a payment option in its stores, business media Finans reports.

The decision could impact less than 1 percent of payments in the store which are currently made using MobilePay, the company said.

READ ALSO: 17 essential phone apps to make your life in Denmark easier

“The primary reason is that MobilePay will from now on demand a technical setup for the payment system in stores and with the investment that will neee, we have concluded that’s not the way we want to go,” Dagrofa’s head of communications Morten Vestberg told Finans.

Dagrofa owns the Let-Køb and Min Købmand convenience store chains in addition to Meny and Spar.

The decision will mean MobilePay is removed from some 530 stores altogether, although individual stores may choose to retain the payment app.

SHOW COMMENTS