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The site was originally occupied by a shopping mall called Plaza Pasadena, which opened in 1980 and featured three anchor stores: J.C. Penney, The Broadway, and May Company California. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was built by The Hahn Company at a cost of $115 million on an 11-acre site and had featured over 120 stores. [ 3 ]
(1) South Coast Plaza – Costa Mesa – 2,800,000 sq ft (260,000 m 2) (1967) Stoneridge Shopping Center – Pleasanton (1980) Stonestown Galleria – San Francisco (1952)
Old Pasadena today is mostly a business district, with some mixed use. It contains a shopping mall, up-market restaurants, a movie theater, nightclubs, shops, outdoor cafés, pubs and comedy clubs, and has an active nightlife. The Pasadena Playhouse is located in Old Pasadena. Most of the buildings also have offices and apartments on the upper ...
In 1895, the Pasadena and Los Angeles Railway built what became the Pacific Electric Railway's South Pasadena Local Red Car line on the entire length of Fair Oaks Avenue to Pasadena from its 6th & Main terminal in Downtown Los Angeles. [3] Also serving the avenue was the North Fair Oaks Avenue Line and the Mount Lowe Railway. The lines were ...
Pie Life Pizza. Pasadena, California. Pie Life Pizza is a literal hole in the wall: It's simply a walk-up window sandwiched between a coffee shop and gym in a small strip mall. But they're cooking ...
Macroplaza Mall, formerly Pasadena Town Square Mall and Plaza Paseo Mall, is a regional shopping mall in Pasadena, Texas, southeast of Houston. Developed by Federated Department Stores Realty [ 3 ] and attached to an existing Foley's Department store, it opened March 1982.
Pasadena Ave. and California Blvd. Demolished July 27, 1974 for construction of Interstate 710. [8] 2: Pasadena Athletic and Country Club: November 11, 1977 (#77001545) 1978: SE corner of E. Green St. and S. Los Robles Ave. Demolished in 1977 for construction of the Plaza Pasadena shopping mall, which was demolished in 2000. [9]
View of the R-Evolution, a 45-foot-tall, 32,000-pound kinetic sculpture by artist Marco Cochrane on Lincoln Road Mall, placed in Novemeber 2023. The art piece will remain on the mall until April 2024.