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Grossmont Center is an outdoor shopping mall in La Mesa, California, a suburb in East County, San Diego. The mall opened in 1961 and is managed by Federal Realty Investment Trust. The mall opened in 1961 and is managed by Federal Realty Investment Trust.
La Mesa: Grossmont Center: 1979 1991 Added in 1979 as a third anchor store in a newly constructed wing. [33] Became an Oshman's, later Sports Authority, now a Restoration Hardware Outlet Manhattan Beach: Manhattan Village: 1980 1991 Became a Macy's Men and Home Store, which closed in 2018. [34] Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie, and West Elm now ...
In 1887, J.W. Robinson Co.'s Boston Dry Goods Store moved to a new store of around 3,000 sq ft (280 m 2) in the Jones Block [1] at 171–173 (post-1890 numbering) Spring Street, considered an adventurous move because at that time, the location was far from the central business district of that period. [2]
Grossmont [47] Grossmont Center: La Mesa, San Diego County: June 11, 1961 as Marston's Welton Becket & Assoc. 156,000 [47] Macy's originally Marston's, rebranded Broadway in 1969; 12 West Covina [48] West Covina Fashion Center, became part of what is now Plaza West Covina: West Covina: June 8, 1962 [48] 1996 vacant was Sears until 2020; 37 ...
Bullock's was a chain of full-line department stores from 1907 through 1995, headquartered in Los Angeles, growing to operate across California, Arizona and Nevada.Bullock's also operated as many as seven more upscale Bullocks Wilshire specialty department stores across Southern California.
The company operates the eponymous “Foot Locker” chain of athletic footwear retail outlets (along with “Kids Foot Locker” and “Lady Foot Locker” stores), and other athletic-based divisions including Champs Sports, Footaction USA, House of Hoops, and Eastbay/Footlocker.com, which owns the rights to Final-Score.
Drollinger played basketball at Grossmont High School and was the CIF Southern Section MVP, as his team won the 1972 CIF championship as a high school All-American. He was a 7'2" (2.19 m) and 250 lb (114 kg) center and played collegiately at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
Marston's department store (1881-1896) at 509 Fifth Avenue Marston's 1912 building, now demolished, from an ad Marston's ad in the San Diego Union and Daily Bee, January 2, 1912 The San Diego Downtown News characterized the store as San Diego's "finest" department store and as "elegant".