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A closed mall and a forest can both be empty. Why does the mall often feel more 'wrong'?

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Answer: Its social script is missing

Its social script is missingRight. A mall is built for crowds, transactions, voices, and movement, so emptiness is not neutral there; it contradicts the place's normal script. Public-space research links routines and social presence with perceived safety, and liminal-space writing points to places stripped of expected function. A forest can feel scary too, but the mall's special wrongness is that a social interior has lost its social signals.

It lacks natural soundsPlausible, because forests have wind, insects, and irregular natural noise while a closed mall can sound dead. But the deeper mismatch is not nature versus no nature. The built place is full of social cues: storefronts, escalators, food courts, and signs all imply people who are not there.

It looks abandoned, not emptyClose, because abandoned places often feel eerie. But a closed mall can feel wrong even when it is clean, maintained, and obviously not ruined. The deeper cue is not decay; it is a space built for social activity temporarily missing the people and routines that make it make sense.

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