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Sorrento Valley is a neighborhood of San Diego, California. It is roughly bounded by Interstate 5 and Interstate 805, Camino Santa Fe to the east, the Los Peñasquitos Canyon Preserve to the north and Miramar Road to the south, as shown on the San Diego Police Department's neighborhood map. [ 1 ]
The large office, retail, entertainment and academic facilities in University City, also known as UTC (with over 9 million sq. ft. of office space), [4] Sorrento Mesa/Sorrento Valley (also over 9 million sq. ft.), [4] Torrey Pines (over 2.6 million sq. ft.), [4] and Del Mar Heights/Carmel Valley (over 4.4 million sq. ft.), [4] together form San Diego's "North City edge city" as it is a major ...
Around 1905 a reservoir was built in University Heights; partly, as a result, the number of buildings in Normal Heights increased from one in January 1906 to 43 in December of the same year. [2] The community was officially founded in 1906, when a syndicate led by D. C. Collier and George M. Hawley filed a subdivision map with the county .
Mira Mesa (Spanish for "Table View") is a community and neighborhood in San Diego, California.The city-recognized Mira Mesa Community Plan Area is roughly bounded by Interstate 15 on the east, Interstate 805 on the west, the Los Peñasquitos Canyon on the north and Marine Corps Air Station Miramar on the south.
Torrey Pines is bordered to the north by the city of Del Mar, to the south by La Jolla, to the east by Interstate 5, Carmel Valley, Torrey Hills, the Los Peñasquitos Canyon Reserve, and Mira Mesa; and to the west by La Jolla and the Pacific Ocean for a short distance near Torrey Pines State Beach and Torrey Pines State Park.
Sorrento Valley station is a commuter rail station in the Sorrento Valley neighborhood of San Diego, California, that is on the NCTD COASTER commuter rail line. The station is served by NCTD COASTER Connection shuttles to the businesses east of the station, the community of Torrey Pines, University of California, San Diego, and Westfield UTC mall.
An economic development non-profit (Mid-City Development Corp.) and area homeowners had proposed building the new substation in 1993, however, the city was unable or unwilling to put up the $3 million needed to build the station. With Price's funding, the station opened in 1996.
Estimates based on the neighborhoods spanning the 92102, 92113, 92114, and 92139 ZIP codes of Southeast San Diego put the population at roughly 195,000 people over an area of 21.2 square miles (55 km 2), placing the area's population density at 9,285.7/sq mi (3,565.5/km 2).