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Stanford Shopping Center is an upscale open air shopping mall located on Route 82 (El Camino Real) at Sand Hill Road in Palo Alto, California. It is on the campus of Stanford University although the university only owns the land and not the actual buildings or stores.
(11) Stanford Shopping Center – Palo Alto – 1,347,935 sq ft (125,227.3 m 2) (1955) Town Center at Corte Madera – Corte Madera (1958) Triangle Square – Costa Mesa (1992)
Town & Country Village can be one of these shopping centers: Town & Country Village (Houston), the upscale shopping center in Houston, Texas; Town & Country Village (Sacramento), a specialty shopping center in Arden Arcade, California; Town & Country Village (Palo Alto), the shopping center in Palo Alto, California
In 1970, Ports opened its United States flagship store in Manhattan, followed by stores in Copley Place, Boston and Stanford Shopping Center in Palo Alto, California. Ports expanded to the United Kingdom, opening its London –based flagship on Bond Street in 1978, with additional boutique openings in Cambridge and Bath in 1979.
Mayfield Mall opened in 1966 and was the first enclosed mall of its type in the region, taking its name from the original town of Mayfield, which was annexed by Palo Alto in 1925. [ 5 ] : 10 Its original anchor was JCPenney , which closed stores on Castro Street and University Avenue to consolidate into the mall location. [ 6 ]
Sand Hill Road, often shortened to just "Sand Hill" or "SHR", [1] is an arterial road in western Silicon Valley, California, running through Palo Alto, Menlo Park, and Woodside, notable for its concentration of venture capital firms. [2]
Great Mall, unlike many other malls (but like most Mills malls), is a "flat" mall with only one story and an oval racetrack layout with six neighborhoods. The mall is currently laid out in this fashion because the existing main structure was a Ford automobile assembly plant and was not designed to serve as a shopping center.
165 University Avenue or Lucky Building or Karma Building is a small rented office building on University Avenue, the main commercial street in downtown Palo Alto, California, that gave rise to Plug and Play Tech Center and to the Amidi Group.