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Stonewood Center, sometimes referred to as Stonewood Mall, is a shopping mall located in Downey, California, which is one of the Gateway Cities of Southeastern Los Angeles County. It is located at the intersection of Firestone and Lakewood Boulevards , and it is from this intersection that the mall's name is derived ("Fire stone " + "Lake wood ...
The Promenade at Downey is a 77-acre (31 ha), 656,000-square-foot (60,900 m 2) retail power center in Downey, California, built on the 1,500,000-square-foot (140,000 m 2) mixed-use development on the site of the former Downey Studios, which before that was the site of a Boeing/NASA industrial complex, originally built in 1948 by North American Aviation.
Stoneridge Shopping Center – Pleasanton (1980) Stonestown Galleria – San Francisco (1952) Stonewood Center – Downey (1958) Sunvalley Shopping Center – Concord (1967) Valencia Town Center – Santa Clarita (1992) Valley Plaza Mall – Bakersfield (1967) Vintage Faire Mall – Modesto (1977) Westfield Culver City – Culver City (1977)
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 ...
Century City Shopping Center: Century City, Westside, L.A. December 10, 1964 Welton Becket & Assoc. 1996 Bloomingdale's: 16 Downey Stonewood Center: Downey: October 18, 1965 143,400 [49] 1996 vacant was Sears until 2021; 17 Huntington Beach [50] Huntington Center, now Bella Terra, I-405 at Edinger Avenue Huntington Beach: November 15, 1965 [51]
The City Shopping Center was the centerpiece of The City, an edge city mixed-use development; in or just outside the mall were two hotels, several office buildings, two movie theaters (City Center Theatres and UA the Movies), gym, three full-service restaurants and a pizzeria, Pepperoni square (owned by Larrys Pizza in Fullerton) which was sold ...
Licorice Pizza was a Los Angeles record store chain that inspired the title of Paul Thomas Anderson's 2021 film of the same name. [1] The term is a colloquial expression for vinyl records, comparing them to the color of licorice and the shape of a pizza.
In 2003, Trans World Entertainment purchased the remaining 148 Wherehouse stores for $41 million (~$65.1 million in 2023) in cash and assumed liabilities while closing 35 under-performing stores. [11] It is not clear when Trans World Entertainment closed the remaining stores or converted them to FYE brand.