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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 ...
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.
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.
Interstate 805 (I-805) is a major north–south auxiliary Interstate Highway in Southern California.It is a bypass auxiliary route of I-5, running roughly through the center of the Greater San Diego region from San Ysidro (part of the city of San Diego) near the Mexico–U.S. border to near Del Mar.
The ballot resulted in the city designating Sorrento Hills as Planned Urbanizing. [2] In September 2001, the Sorrento Hills Community Planning Board voted to change the name of the community to Torrey Hills. [2] In early 2002, the San Diego City Council initiated a plan amendment to formally change the community name.
San Diego has high real estate prices. San Diego home prices peaked in 2005, and then declined along with the national trend. As of December 2010, prices were down 36 percent from the peak, [171] median price of homes having declined by more than $200,000 between 2005 and 2010. [172] As of May 2015, the median price of a house was $520,000. [173]
Carmel Valley is a suburban planned community in the northwestern corner of San Diego, California, United States. [2] The community is composed of commercial offices, residential units, hotels, retail stores and restaurants.