The Dead Mall Society

TLC (Teaching and Learning College)

The Dead Mall Society

December 23, 2025 at 05:22PM

Liminal spaces have been enjoying a moment, their appeal (if that’s the right word) championed on Reddit and TikTok, embraced by video game designers and ambient musicians. And yet despite their popularity, the spaces themselves are often underexplored, mere internet phenomena, photos to be rounded up in lists and tagged as “inexplicably creepy.” Lana Hall’s walking tour of deserted and defunct shopping malls around Toronto goes beyond the eeriness factor to consider the civic and cultural forces that gives these thresholds their peculiar buzz.

We pull into our final mall destination of the day, which Aryeh preemptively describes as “a beautiful and tragic space.” Inside, the main floor has been commandeered by a mishmash of cash-only Asian food stalls, which gives it the feel of a makeshift street market. On the mall’s perimeters, vendors sell DVDs, Filipino souvenirs, discount travel agency packages, while the building’s upper levels consist of carpeted banquet halls and space leased by a Chinese Baptist church. One or two of the walls have been painted a shade of bubblegum pink not found in nature. We run up and down the stairs, delighted by the open space, whispering to each other that there’s a payphone bank with real phonebooks from the ’90s. Of all the malls, this one feels like the most functional, as though unplugged from the “global mall system,” as Aryeh calls it. It’s gone back to the earth, becoming what its community really needs: cheap noodles and worship services and bootleg DVDs. Somewhere, a land developer is having a wet dream about turning this place into a utopian master-planned community, but for now it persists, a quiet dignity to its stubbornness.  

I once read a comment on r/LiminalSpace likening the feeling of being in a liminal space to the sensation you get as you’re about to rappel off a cliff. Weight balanced between your foot and a rope, your body hovering over the drop, it’s a viscerally unsettling moment as you navigate two different experiences of gravity. But with that comes possibility, said the commenter, so many different futures awaiting as you leap into the chasm.



from Longreads https://longreads.com/2025/12/23/liminal-spaces-abandoned-malls/
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