The second, BROOKDALE CENTER {in Brooklyn Center}, was dedicated in 1962. ROSEDALE CENTER {in Roseville} began business in 1969. The final "Dale" mall developed by the company -by then known as the Dayton Hudson Corporation- was Minnetonka's RIDGEDALE CENTER, which was completed in 1974.
The harsh Minnesota winters surely had a lot to do with the proliferation of climate-controlled shopping centers in and around the Twin Cities. By 1962, with interior malls still seen as a new-fangled novelty, there were five such centers in the metro area.
As a for-instance, in 1962 there were no enclosed shopping malls in the metropolitan areas of Washington, D.C., Atlanta, Los Angeles, Boston, Seattle, San Francisco-Oakland, Denver, St. Louis or even Milwaukee. Inclement weather or not, the Minnesota metropolis was quite trend-setting, shopping mall-wise.