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MainPlace Mall (formerly known as Westfield MainPlace) is an enclosed shopping mall at the north edge of Santa Ana, California near Downtown Santa Ana, adjacent to the City of Orange and the Orange Crush interchange of the Santa Ana, Garden Grove and Orange freeways.
Vallco Shopping Mall – Cupertino (1976–2020) Valley Plaza – North Hollywood (August 12, 1951 – present) – most elements abandoned or demolished, some remain The Village at Orange – Orange (August 16, 1971 – January 31, 2024) – many exterior tenants remain in business and being rebuilt as a lifestyle center
By the 1980s, the center was outdated in design — two rows of stores with a small pedestrian mall in the center, surrounded by acres of parking — and had lost business to more modern malls including Fashion Square/MainPlace and The City Shopping Center in Orange. [3]
Santa Ana: Santa Ana Fashion Square: 9/17/1958 - Macy's This was the first of four Bullock's Fashion Square centers. Architects Pereira & Luckman. Mall was built out extensively and is now called MainPlace. 09 San Fernando/ Valley/ Sherman Oaks: Sherman Oaks Fashion Square: 4/30/1962 - Macy's 10 Lakewood: Lakewood Center: 4/26/1965 1993 [34 ...
Mall or street Square feet Square meters Opened Closed Notes Long Beach flagship Fourth/Pine 180,000: 16,723: 1912 1982 Flagship store opened in 1912 and expanded over the decades. Closed in 1982, replaced by Long Beach Plaza store. Demolished 1985. Santa Ana: Main/Bush/9th/10th 66,170 [13] 6,147: 1950 1987
Mercado González in Costa Mesa is the first Mexican-style mercado of its kind in Southern California — and a sign of one city's shifting politics.
In 1956, Rankin's announced plans to open a branch in Orange County Plaza at Chapman Avenue and Brookhurst Street in Garden Grove, now site of The Promenade at Garden Grove. The branch was to measure 28,000 sq ft (2,600 m 2). [5] [6] In addition to its Santa Ana store, Rankin's had a location in Fullerton at Orangefair Mall from 1958. [7]
In this file photo from June 30, 1995, Jeanean Lockett, an employee of Spec’s Music at the 163rd Street Mall, showed off the new 8,000- square-foot store, which was 6,500-square-feet bigger than ...