It was the big project for the city center: this northern shopping center was almost emptied of its stores.
Stroll between the racks, compare the cuts, touch the fabrics, go from one store to another to discover the new collections… For a long time, fashion shopping in shopping centers had something almost ritualistic. We would spend the afternoon there, try on a dress “just to see”, and sometimes leave with a bag full of new things. Today, in certain places formerly dedicated to fashion, the decor has suddenly changed: boarded up windows, empty cells, drawn metal curtains.
Throughout France, certain shopping centers are experiencing this silent transformation. The big brands are deserting the secondary galleries, the aisles are emptying and these shopping temples are gradually transforming into hybrid places.
In the North, one place particularly embodies this shift: Espace Saint-Christophe in Tourcoing. The building still exists, clearly visible in the heart of the city center. But behind its modern facades, there is almost nothing left of the large shopping center imagined during its inauguration in 2011. At the time, the project was ambitious: to revitalize the city center with a brand new gallery and attract brands capable of recreating a real shopping stroll.
Initially, several brands responded. Ready-to-wear brands like Camaïeu, Mim and La Halle animated the gallery aisles alongside other fashion and accessories boutiques. But the dynamic did not last. Very quickly, the closures followed one another. Some estimates have cited up to 80% of empty commercial cells at the height of the crisis. The windows went out one after the other and the once lively aisles took on the appearance of a ghost gallery. As La Voix du Nord recounted, the center was quickly considered one of the region’s most notable commercial fiascos.
To avoid total abandonment, the town of Tourcoing and the developers chose to transform rather than demolish. The center has been extensively restructured: several former shops have been converted into offices, particularly for businesses or call centers, while other spaces now accommodate services or leisure activities.
However, a few brands still resist in the gallery. C&A or Histoire d’Or continue to welcome customers there, alongside a few local shops. But these still lit windows almost look like survivors. Because where people once came to stroll among the fashion collections, a large part of the old boutiques have now changed their function.
Fifteen years after its inauguration, Espace Saint-Christophe is still standing. But the shopping temple initially imagined has been transformed. The fashion promenade has disappeared, replaced by a place in full transformation, a discreet symbol of a business that is turning the page.







