in
Paramus New Jersey, the
most densely populated state in the United States, and in the suburban sphere of influence of both
New York City and
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, has a comparatively large number of notable malls throughout the state.
Paramus, in
Bergen County, is one of the largest shopping meccas in the country, with its four major shopping malls accounting for a significant proportion of the over $5 billion in annual retail sales generated in the borough, more than any other
ZIP Code in the United States. This high level of retail sales persists despite the fact that the County, in general, and the Borough, in particular, have
blue laws that force the malls and other retailers to close on Sunday.
Garden State Plaza was the state's first shopping mall. It opened in three stages between May 1957 and September 1960 and was fully enclosed in 1984. The shopping complex is now known as Westfield Garden State Plaza. The Garden State's second mall-type shopping venue, Bergen Mall (now known as
Outlets at Bergen Town Center), was built in Paramus and
Maywood and was officially dedicated on November 14, 1957, with great fanfare, as
Dave Garroway, host of
The Today Show served as master of ceremonies. The Bergen Mall, which was fully enclosed in 1973, was first planned in 1955 by
Allied Stores to have 100 stores and 8,600 parking spaces in a mall that would include a Stern's store and two other department stores as part of the initial design. Allied's chairman B. Earl Puckett confidently announced The Bergen Mall as the largest of ten proposed centers, stating that there were 25 cities that could support such centers and that no more than 50 malls of this type would ever be built nationwide.
Cherry Hill Mall, was the first large indoor shopping center on the
East Coast of the United States and attracted busloads of visitors soon after its opening in October 1961. (The
Southdale Shopping Center in
Edina, Minnesota, was the very first enclosed mall, beating Cherry Hill to the honor by five years). The popularity of the mall as a destination is often cited as one of the factors that led the mall's host municipality to change its name from
Delaware Township, to its current name of
Cherry Hill Township. Despite an early refusal to temporarily close other New Jersey shopping malls during the
COVID-19 pandemic, New Jersey Governor
Phil Murphy eventually agreed to do so on March 17, 2020. This came one day after the
Jersey Gardens closed after an employee tested positive for
COVID-19 and
Jersey City Mayor
Steve Fulop closed Jersey City's two major shopping malls
Newport Centre and Hudson Mall. ==Role as public square==