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PC Club was a privately owned, United States–based chain of computer hardware stores established in City of Industry, California, in 1992. The company closed all its stores on July 29, 2008. The company closed all its stores on July 29, 2008.
Sun City Palm Desert was developed by Del E. Webb Corp. (acquired by Pulte Homes in 2001). Construction began in 1992 and was completed in 2003. The original name was Sun City Palm Springs from 1991 to 1996. [4] Sun City Palm Desert is an active 55+ gated retirement community, with 9,000 residents, 5,000 all single-level homes, 1,600 acres, and ...
Sun City Palm Desert is an adjacent master-planned retirement community located on the north side of Interstate 10, on unincorporated land just northeast of the city limits of Palm Desert itself, and about 7.7 miles from downtown Palm Desert. All residences in the community use Palm Desert, CA 92211 as part of their address.
This list of people from Palm Springs, California describes notable residents who have had homes in the city and nearby resort communities of the Coachella Valley.These communities, which include Palm Springs, Bermuda Dunes, Cathedral City, Coachella, Desert Hot Springs, Indian Wells, Indio, La Quinta, Palm Desert, Rancho Mirage and Thermal are in the Coachella Valley of Riverside County ...
Charlotte, North Carolina–based Harris Teeter carried the PC brand in the 1990s. St. Louis–based National Supermarkets , then owned by Loblaw, introduced PC along with other Loblaw-owned chains. It continued until the chain was purchased by competitor Schnucks in 1995, which continued carrying it until 1998.
In October 2008, the house was listed for sale at US$12.95 million, but it was not sold. [7] It was again listed for sale in October 2020 at US$25 million. [8] The Kaufmann house was included in a list of all-time top 10 houses in Los Angeles, despite its location in Palm Springs, in a Los Angeles Times survey of experts in December 2008. [9]
The Hope Residence is a house at 2466 Southridge Drive in Palm Springs, California. It is 23,600 sq ft (2,190 m 2) in size. [1] The house was built for the American entertainers Bob and Dolores Hope and completed in 1979. The house is noted for its large undulating triangular roof, with a large central light shaft. [2]
The two would get into real estate development once again and buy over 3,000 vacant lots from Atlantic. It was part of a plan by Atlantic to get $200 million to sell off half of the 87,000 acres and 9 water processing plants it had, but this idea "never fully materialized," with Atlantic filing for bankruptcy protection in 2001.