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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.
The Outlets at Orange underwent two phases of expansion on the east side of the mall. The first phase included a new Nordstrom Rack store which was completed in 2013. The second phase was completed in 2016 which included five new stores such as Gap Factory Store, Polo Ralph Lauren, and Orange County's first Bloomingdale's Outlet. The second ...
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.
And like Plaza Mexico, an outdoor mall with facades that replicate classic architecture from Mexico, the Source has become a hub for culture-defining trends. Compose your perfect bite at M Korean ...
The Rankin Building, 117W Fourth Street at Sycamore, is a historic building that was usually seen as a reminder of when the Downtown Santa Ana was a shopping center, with department stores such as Rankin's, Montgomery Ward (northeast corner of Main, demolished), [8] J. C. Penney (northwest corner of Bush) [9] and Buffums.
Orange County's active outdoor culture is home to many surfers, skateboarders, mountain bikers, cyclists, climbers, hikers, kayaking, sailing and sand volleyball. Street banners promoting the county's two major league teams, the Ducks and the Angels. The Major League Baseball team in Orange County is the Los Angeles Angels.
Pages in category "Shopping malls in Orange County, California" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
A Wometco 163rd Street Theatre was tucked toward the mall’s rear, and in 1961 was doubled and renamed the 163rd Street & Patio Theater. Its marquee faced the main street.