The Minnesota Twins and Vikings moved from the Metropolitan Stadium in 1982, leaving behind 78 acres of real estate possibility in Bloomington, Minnesota. The Mall of America was one of four final proposals for the land after it was bought by Bloomington Port Authority.
In 1986 Bloomington Port Authority signed an agreement with Triple Five Group to develop the 78 acres of land into the Mall of America.
Developers broke ground on June 14, 1989. There were still doubts about how successful the project would be.
The mall cost over $650 million to build. Construction lasted three years as people anxiously awaited the completion of the biggest mall in American history.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdOn August 11, 1992, the mall officially opened, with more than 300 stores and 10,000 workers.
When the mall opened, The New York Times called it "a 78-acre full-sensory smorgasbord of consumerism."
At least 150,000 people came to the mall on opening day. The crowds poured in and pressed up against the glass doors in anticipation of the grand reveal.
“I remember walking towards the entrance the morning we opened and seeing all these faces pressed up against the glass,” Maureen Bausch, the Mall of America's first publicist, said in a blog post. “That's when I knew for certain it was going to be super successful.”
As thousands of people poured into the brand-new complex and explored the different shops and attractions, it was clear that the Mall of America was a hit.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe mall was divided into four main sections that each had a different theme and design.
The mall even had its own theme song, written by Robin Batteau. The upbeat song was featured in a 1992 commercial and boasted the lyrics, "There's a place for fun in your life, the Mall of America. You've got to see it to believe it. Who told you you can't have it all?"
Over a million visitors reportedly came to the mall within a week of its opening. Even celebrities like Ray Charles and Larry Gatlin stopped by.
When the Mall of America opened, it featured Knott's Camp Snoopy, a theme park based on the characters from the classic Peanuts comic strip.
Peanuts' late creator Charles Schulz, who was from Minnesota, came to opening day to see his creation come to life in a theme park.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdOpening week was crowded. "From the epicenter near Camp Snoopy, it felt like an ecstatic mall rave, the staccato ka-ching of thousands of cash registers serving as the high-frequency techno-beat for hundreds of thousands of Midwest shoppers," the New York Times reported at the time.
The Mall of America closed Camp Snoopy in 2006, the Star Tribune reported. On March 15, 2008, a brand-new theme park, Nickelodeon Universe, replaced it.
Though people were sad to say goodbye to Camp Snoopy, the introduction of the new theme park helped contribute to an increase in mall traffic in 2011, The Star Tribune reported.
Today, the Mall of America attracts 40 million visitors annually and generates close to $2 billion in economic activity for Minnesota each year.
Having grown to over 520 stores and 27 rides and attractions, the Mall of America is still the largest mall in the US.