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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.
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 ...
The first stateside store opened at the Source last year. “I was so surprised the Orange County Korean community already knew about this brand,” said Hun Hur, corporate manager of Old Ferry Donut.
The Village at Orange, formerly known as the Orange Mall and later as The Mall of Orange, was a small enclosed shopping mall located in Orange, California. [1] The mall, one of Orange's first, opened for consumer entry in 1971, and was composed of both internal merchants and external anchor tenant buildings, the original latter of which only Walmart remains operational.
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)
In January 1960, Shopping Bag —with 38 stores at that time— and Vons —with 28 stores— announced their merger, making it the second largest supermarket chain on the West Coast. [3] The merger was challenged by the Federal Trade Commission , and after two lower court victories for Vons, in 1966 the Supreme Court of the United States ...
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.