For shoppers, it's a click-and-pay world.
That doesn't, however, mean there's a glut of vacant and boarded storefronts in the Twin Cities.
"We're having our best year on record," said JoAnna Hicks, co-founder of Twin Cities-based Element Commercial Real Estate, a brokerage that specializes in filling retail spaces.
Hicks said there's been a post-pandemic surge in in-person shopping, boosting demand for stores, restaurants and other retail spaces in the Twin Cities. That's especially true in urban neighborhoods in Minneapolis and St. Paul that have long played second fiddle to suburban shopping malls. Those hyper-local neighborhood nodes are even attracting national investors.
It's a trend that flies in the face of attention-grabbing headlines about store closings, such as when Nordstrom announced this month that it was shuttering its Nordstrom Rack location in downtown Minneapolis.
Coresight Research, a retail data firm, said that this year U.S. retailers have announced about 4,432 store openings compared with 1,954 closings. Discount stores, the firm said, topped the list of announced openings, followed by restaurants and apparel stores.
Those openings, and a post-pandemic return to in-person shopping, are happening at a time when supply chain and labor constraints have made building new projects difficult, time-consuming and costly. In turn, that has boosted demand for existing spaces.

In the Twin Cities only a half-million-plus square feet of new retail space was built in both 2019 and 2020. That's far less than during previous years. In 2021, with the pandemic forcing consumers almost exclusively online, only 80,000 square feet got built. That's about the size of a large grocery store.