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Sunvalley Shopping Center, or more popularly Sunvalley Mall, is a regional shopping center located in Concord, California (one of the suburbs in the San Francisco Bay Area, in east central Contra Costa County). Located off Interstate 680, Sunvalley is owned and operated by the Taubman Company and is anchored by two Macy's locations, JCPenney ...
(11) Stanford Shopping Center – Palo Alto – 1,347,935 sq ft (125,227.3 m 2) (1955) Town Center at Corte Madera – Corte Madera (1958) Triangle Square – Costa Mesa (1992)
Broadway Plaza is an outdoor shopping mall located in downtown Walnut Creek.The shopping center opened on October 11, 1951 and is owned and operated by Macerich.The mall is anchored by Nordstrom and Macy's, and features nearly 80 stores including flagship H&M and ZARA stores, a standalone Apple store with an adjoining outdoor plaza, an Industrious co-working space, a Life Time Fitness sports ...
The mall was designed by Victor Gruen Associates; the second floor was built as a mezzanine to allow a two-story ceiling above the center of the ground floor. [15] Under the First Phase, the central mall and Sears store were scheduled for completion by February 1971. [ 16 ]
Westfield Valley Fair, commonly known as Valley Fair, is a prominent shopping mall in San Jose, California.Valley Fair is the largest mall, by area, in Northern California and has higher sales revenue than all other malls in California, including the two in Southern California which have larger area than Valley Fair. [3]
Sun Valley, Ohio: A wedding and events venue in Geauga County, just east of Cleveland. Luna Pier, Michigan: A city in Monroe County just north of Toledo, Ohio. Moon Beach, New York: A neighborhood ...
Main street at the mall. Bay Street features a mix of upscale and traditional mall retailers, with a two-level Barnes & Noble bookstore, flagship West Elm and Apple stores. Four Gap, Inc brands: Gap, Old Navy, Athleta, and separate men's and women's Banana Republic stores all closed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Target and Mervyn's anchors were added and the complex was renamed Fallbrook Mall. Damaged by the 1994 Northridge earthquake , and in decline by the late 1990s, the shopping venue was redeveloped between August 2001 and November 2003, emerging as the 1.2-million-square-foot (110,000 m 2 ) Fallbrook Center of today.