From the origin stories of Omaha's businesses and buildings to the developments shaping its future, if it's part of Omaha's story, it's fair game.

Published June 18, 2026 | Updated June 18, 2026

With a recent proposal to rehabilitate the Center Mall into a mixed-use building with 500 apartments and office space, let’s take a look back at the history of Omaha’s first enclosed shopping mall which also happened to be one of the first in the country.

The mall was the brainchild of John Wiebe. Born in the Oklahoma panhandle in 1922, Wiebe spent much of his teenage years riding the rails going from one job as a laborer to another. He enlisted in the Navy in 1940 and arrived in Omaha in 1943 to serve in a top-secret project to modify B-29 bombers for special missions including the Enola Gay, which dropped that fateful bomb on Hiroshima to end World War II.

This postcard from around 1960 shows the wraparound parking garage of The Center with the Texaco gas station at the southeast corner of the intersection at 42nd and Center Street.

After the war ended in 1945, Wiebe settled in Omaha and embarked upon a career as a building contractor that produced 150 homes in the Loveland neighborhood, along with churches, schools, factories, apartments, and even airports. He also built two retail stores, both of which failed before opening shopping malls, the first of which was The Center. 

Postcard of Younkers at The Center. Image courtesy of Mall Hall of Fame.

Wiebe arrived at the idea of a suburban shopping center after his wife, Harriet, complained about the difficulty of parking downtown, the city’s primary shopping district. With that, he took to the sky to observe traffic patterns downtown from his private plane. He and his architects also charted growth trends and mapped out residential density patterns to help pinpoint the location. He used that intel to develop the shopping center, which solved the parking problem by building a parking garage around the structure, combining easier access and ample parking spaces.

2026 OE photo of The Center. This is looking south at where the Texaco gas station once sat. The Center logo used by the mall has not changed since it opened.

He went to work finding the ideal location after hiring the architecture firms of Kenneth Welch and J.G. Daverman of Grand Rapids, MI. They settled on undeveloped land at 42nd and Center across from the new Veterans Hospital. In 1954, the work crews cut through a steep embankment to remove over 100,000 cubic yards of dirt from the 6 ½ acre site.

When it was finished in 1955, the five-story mall had just 200,000 square feet of leasable space, small even by standards of the day. It was designed so that the first three levels were accessible from a three-story parking garage that surrounded the building. The fourth floor consisted mostly of office space, while the fifth was home to Al Green’s Skyroom Restaurant, which was part of a national chain.

2026 OE photo of The Center from the VA. Center Street runs along the front of the building.

The Center proved popular due to its centralized location west of downtown and for the convenience provided by its wraparound parking garage that provided easy access to its combination of retail stores. It also had the added convenience of a bank, as well as a service station nestled into the northwest corner of the lot. It was so popular that traffic directors were hired during the holidays to control foot traffic to the entrances.

2026 OE photo of The Center. This is looking at the main entrance on the east side of the building.

Among its tenants were Big Chief supermarket, Hested’s, Younkers, Carl S. Baum Druggists, Omar Baking retail store, Reed’s Ice Cream, Kimball Laundry, Anthony’s Panther Room, Lollipop Lane, among others. The one tenant that got away was Brandeis, the king of Omaha retail. When presented with the opportunity, Wiebe recalled that Brandeis crumpled the blueprint and tossed it to the floor. Within five years of its opening, The Center faced its first real competition in the form of Crossroads Mall, which Brandeis built in 1960 at 72nd and Dodge.

2026 OE photo looking inside the 1st floor of The Center.

Meanwhile, the fifth floor, which had become the Center Roof Garden Restaurant, was renovated in 1959 as Sky Lanes, a 24-lane bowling alley, as well as the Cimarron Room and Terrace, a cocktail lounge and restaurant. It also included the Kiddie Korral, which provided babysitting services. The fifth floor was destroyed and the fourth significantly damaged in a fire in 1969. The mall closed as the repairs were made and when it reopened it featured the Old English aesthetic that still appears within the building today.

2026 OE photo looking inside the 2nd floor of The Center.

While some consider The Center to be the first enclosed shopping mall in the country, it’s a matter of definition. Southdale Center in Edina, Minnesota is often considered the first fully enclosed, climate-controlled mall. Even though The Center opened about one year earlier, some claim that having just one anchor store rather than two disqualifies it. 

2026 OE photo looking inside the 3rd floor of The Center.

The Center, over time, lost its appeal as a retail mall and began to decline due to the continual westward movement of the city, as well as competition from larger malls built closer to the new suburban housing developments. Wiebe himself followed that trend by opening Westroads Mall at 100th and W. Dodge in 1968. It was a project he first proposed in 1959, but it required years of zoning approval. Once completed, his new mall was five times larger than his first. In 1978, Wiebe sold The Center to Management, Inc., a partnership that was formed by three of his employees. They converted it to 120,000 square feet of office space, even though Younkers and Sky Lanes remained open through much of the 1990s.

2026 OE photo looking inside the 4th floor of The Center.

Wiebe continued his distinguished career that included induction into the Omaha Business Hall of Fame. He also became one of the city’s great philanthropists, which included a contribution to Children’s Hospital in the name of his son, who passed away due to double pneumonia at six days old. In the 1990s, the family donated their estate at 168th and W. Center Road to Children’s Hospital, which eventually sold the property to developers. John and Harriet also created the Wiebe Charitable Foundation, which donated more than $13M to a number of organizations, the majority being children’s-based charities. Harriet passed away in 2006, followed by John in 2009.

2026 OE photo looking inside the 5th floor of The Center.

Today, The Center remains in use by more than 100 tenants, including nonprofits in addition to government and community assistance offices that offer a wide variety of services. It’s also the home for the South Omaha Immigrant History Museum, Mama’s Attic: The Doll Museum of African American History, Gentle Dentistry, and Access Bank among others. 

John Wiebe couldn’t have foreseen his mall, while rough around the edges more than 70 years later, becoming what one nearby resident called a “quiet powerhouse of essential services for the citizens of Omaha” in an interview with the Omaha World-Herald. Whatever happens next, The Center has outlasted many of its peers.

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Read OE on Grow Omaha: Local History by Omaha Exploration | Grow Omaha

More pictures

2026 OE photo of the parking garage of The Center. This is looking east from 42nd Street.
2026 OE photo of The Center. This is looking north at the southern end of the mall.
2026 OE photo inside the second-floor parking garage at The Center. Standing water can be seen near the back.
2026 OE photo from inside The Center Mall. I suspect that this mural on the 3rd floor is original to the renovation.
Drawing of The Center. Inage courtesy of Mall Hall of Fame. Drawing from Younker Brothers, Incorporated.
1955 Plan for the 1st floor of The Center. Courtesy of Mall Hall of Fame.
Google Earth image of The Center Mall at 42nd and Center Street. The Texaco in the bottom right corner was demolished years earlier.

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One response to “The Center: The Mall That John Wiebe Built, and What Might Come Next”

  1. This is fascinating. I have memories of going to some office in the Center with my parents in the nineties when I was less than ten years old, and I assumed the entire structure had gone the fate of places like Crossroads—a long, sad decline. Glad to hear it’s actually still usable.

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