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Plaza West Covina is a large regional mall with 185 shops, stores, and restaurants. The mall is two levels and is anchored by Macy's (180,000 sq ft (17,000 m 2 )) to the east, JCPenney (193,963 sq ft (18,019.8 m 2 )) to the south, former Sears (137,820 sq ft (12,804 m 2 )) to the west, Best Buy (45,000 sq ft (4,200 m 2 )) to the north, the ...
In 1993, May Company closed its Eastland Center location and moved to the nearby West Covina Fashion Plaza, continuing operations as the newly formed Robinsons-May chain. The ex-May location stood empty for years, with the Sportmart continuing to operate in its former basement. In 1997, the upper level of the mall was permanently closed.
Plaza West Covina is a regional mall that has 208 shops, stores, and restaurants. The mall is two levels and is anchored by Macy's (180,000 sq ft.) to the east, JC Penney (193,963 sq ft.) to the south, Sears (137,820 sq ft.) to the west, Best Buy (45,000 sq ft.) to the north, and the XXI Forever flagship store, also to the north.
Plaza West Covina – West Covina (1975–present) The Promenade – Woodland Hills, Los Angeles (1973–2022) Promenade on the Peninsula – Rolling Hills Estates (1981–1998) Promenade Temecula – Temecula (1999–present) Puente Hills Mall – City of Industry (1974–present) The Quad at Whittier – Whittier (1973–1987)
In 1978, [20] after moving from its original West Covina location due to an expiring lease, Clifton's relocated to inside the Westfield Shoppingtown West Covina [45] and renamed itself "The Greenery" for its garden theme. [46] In 2003 the branch closed, leaving "Clifton's Brookdale" at 7th and Broadway as the last of what was once an 8-store ...
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 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 ]
Northridge and West Covina stores continued operating until 1986. [3] Kapelovitz sold the Palm Springs La Plaza store to Frank Gross and Stanlee McNeish, and it continued under the Desmond's name until 2005. [42] A separate "Desmond's Big and Tall" Store in Palm Desert Town Center continued operating after that time.