Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There was parking for 3000 cars and opening day drew crowds of 40,000 people from across Orange County, according to the Los Angeles Times. [3] [4] [5] As Bullock's opened similar Fashion Square malls in other Southern California cities, the venue was renamed Santa Ana Fashion Square. [6] Mall exterior Mall interior
Santa Monica Place – Santa Monica (1980) The Shops at Dos Lagos – Corona (2006) The Shops at River Park – Fresno (1996) The Shops at Sportsman's Lodge – Studio City (2022) Vietnam Town – San Jose (2007) Simi Valley Town Center – Simi Valley (2005) (11) Stanford Shopping Center – Palo Alto – 1,347,935 sq ft (125,227.3 m 2) (1955)
Santa Ana: Santa Ana Fashion Square: 9/17/1958 - Macy's This was the first of four Bullock's Fashion Square centers. Architects Pereira & Luckman. Mall was built out extensively and is now called MainPlace. 09 San Fernando/ Valley/ Sherman Oaks: Sherman Oaks Fashion Square: 4/30/1962 - Macy's 10 Lakewood: Lakewood Center: 4/26/1965 1993 [34 ...
Located less than three miles from Knott’s Berry Farm, the 500,000-square-foot complex is home to CGV Cinemas, a movie theater specializing in subtitled Korean films; Korean-oriented beauty and ...
The Old Santa Ana City Hall, an Art Deco structure. Downtown Santa Ana (DTSA), also called Downtown Orange County, is the city center of Santa Ana, the county seat of Orange County, California. It is the institutional center for the city of Santa Ana as well as Orange County, a retail and business hub.
Other regional shopping malls include (from north to south): Brea Mall, The Village at Orange, The Outlets at Orange, MainPlace Santa Ana, Westminster Mall, Bella Terra in Huntington Beach, The Market Place straddling Tustin and Irvine, Irvine Spectrum Center, Fashion Island in Newport Beach, Five Lagunas and The Shops at Mission Viejo.
South Coast Metro straddles the city limits of Santa Ana and Costa Mesa, and is a dense mix of residential, office, and retail developments that spread out from South Coast Plaza and forms an urban-retail village that is distinct from the surrounding suburban development. [2]
The center was announced in 1956 and was to cost $10,000,000. In 1956 and 1958, the project announced that Penney's, Newberry's and Grant's would locate in the Plaza, as well as the first branch of Rankin's department store of Santa Ana, which was to measure 28,000 sq ft (2,600 m 2) – however, Rankin's never did wind up opening a branch there.