Strawberry Square

{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2025}}

{{Use American English|date=February 2025}}

{{infobox shopping mall

| name = Strawberry Square

| image = Strawberry Square, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.jpg

| caption = Strawberry Square as seen looking South from Walnut Street & 4th Street, September 2010

| location = Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA

| address = 11 N. 3rd Street, Harrisburg, PA 17101

| opening_date = 1978

| developer =

| architect = Mitchell/Giurgola and later Lawrie and Green

| owner = Harristown Development Corporation

| number_of_stores = 30+

| number_of_anchors =

| floor_area =

| floors = 2 (public area)

| website = [http://www.strawberrysquare.com/ Strawberry Square]

}}

Strawberry Square is a mixed-use retail and commercial complex located in downtown Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. It is owned and managed by the Harristown Development Corporation (HDC), a non-profit organization.

History

Strawberry Square is considered a project in the modern urban revitalization of center city Harrisburg. Phase I of this mixed-use facility originally opened in 1978, with {{convert|1400000|sqft|m2}} of office and retail space overlooking the Capitol following the closing and demolition of the Penn-Harris Hotel in 1973. Eleven years after Phase I, HDC completed the $21 million Phase II expansion. This included the restoration of ten 19th and 20th century buildings that are listed in the National Register of Historic Places and represent the city's oldest remaining retail establishments. The site was named for the alleyway that traverses the complex's east–west axis, which still exists from Front Street to Third Street in downtown Harrisburg. The portion of Strawberry Alley vacated for the Complex is now a commons area beside the second floor escalators. It was also referred to as the 'Key Block' when the complex was first constructed in the 1970s.

Major tenants include Verizon, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (including the headquarters of the Pennsylvania Attorney General), Harrisburg University, Temple University Harrisburg, Capital Area School for the Arts, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, and Salomon Smith Barney, Inc. In addition, Strawberry Square houses an array of service retail, upscale fashion shops, jewelers and other specialty stores. More than 40 shops and galleries along with 10 food emporiums are contained in about {{convert|170000|sqft|m2|-3}} of retail space.{{cite web|url=http://www.city-data.com/articles/Strawberry-Square-Harrisburg.html|title=Strawberry Square|website=city-data.com}} Its food court includes a variety of national and international cuisine. From 1988 until 2022, the atrium featured a 41-foot tall audio-kinetic sculpture by George Rhoads entitled the "Chockablock Clock" which was relocated to Shippensburg University to make room for a meeting space.{{Cite web |last=Pynes |first=Mark |date=2022-10-11 |title=Harrisburg’s Chockablock Clock sculpture being dismantled, moved: photos |url=https://www.pennlive.com/news/2022/10/chockablock-clock-sculpture-being-moved-to-shippensburg.html |access-date=2022-10-13 |website=pennlive |language=en}}

Due to its high name recognition and centralized location, Strawberry Square's atrium has become, in effect, a Harrisburg town square, hosting hundreds of community, education, and arts groups and events annually. The complex also hosts multiple high-school and college classes.

Educational institutions

References

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