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Puente Hills Mall, located in City of Industry, California, United States, is a major regional shopping center in the San Gabriel Valley region of Los Angeles County.It is most notable for serving as the filming site for the Twin Pines/Lone Pine Mall for the 1985 movie Back to the Future starring Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd.
Other real-life shooting locations of Hill Valley landmarks include: [8] Doc's house in 1955 is the Gamble House in Pasadena, California. Doc's garage in 1985 was a façade set up next to a Burger King on North Victory Boulevard in Burbank, California. [11] Twin Pines/Lone Pine Mall is actually the Puente Hills Mall in Industry, California.
Midtown Square Mall: St. Cloud 1982 181,500 square feet (17,000 m 2) Quality Investments Inc. Miller Hill Mall: Duluth: 1973 833,000 square feet (77,000 m 2) [14] Simon Property Group Northtown Mall: Blaine: 1972 621,109 square feet (58,000 m 2) [15] WP Glimcher: Paul Bunyan Mall: Bemidji: 1977 297,803 square feet (28,000 m 2) [16] Lexington ...
Margaret John remembers the carousal that use to be at South Park Mall. It stood 25 feet tall, was hand painted by Italian artists, contained real horsehair in the tails and was a replica of a ...
Twin Pines Minerals of Birmingham, Al. A company's plan to mine minerals near the edge of the Okefenokee Swamp and its federally protected wildlife refuge neared final approval Friday as Georgia ...
Northwest Arkansas Mall. The history of shopping malls in Arkansas began in 1970 with the opening of Phoenix Village Mall in Fort Smith. [1] As of 2016, the state has 21 malls and lifestyle centers. Six malls, including Phoenix Village, have been demolished or converted to other uses. The biggest mall is Central Mall in Fort Smith; it has 141 ...
Corbett's measure would not affect the draft permits Twin Pines received earlier this month from the Georgia Environmental Protection Division to mine on 773 acres less than 3 miles (4.8 ...
The light rail portion of the network, managed by Metro Transit, has 37 light rail stations in operation across two lines: the Blue Line, running from downtown Minneapolis to the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, and the Green Line, connecting downtown Minneapolis to downtown Saint Paul. [1]