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Paseo Colorado is just east of and connected by a pedestrian bridge, the Garfield Promenade, to Old Town Pasadena, and west of the center of downtown. The mall is located across Green Street from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium in the Pasadena Conference Center .
Southeastern Pasadena refers to the neighborhoods east of Marengo Avenue and Downtown Pasadena, south of Downtown and the 210 Freeway, and west of Eaton Wash. Southeast Pasadena is served by Metro Local lines 180, 267 and 662. It is also served by Pasadena Transit routes 10, 20 and 60 and Foothill Transit line 187.
The Regal cinema chain on Thursday said it will reopen Pasadena's former ArcLight theater at the Paseo shopping center. Regal has entered into a lease agreement with real estate firm Onni Group to ...
This development filled vacant buildings and was the impetus of the revitalization of Old Town on Colorado Boulevard. [66] Paseo Colorado is an open-air mall that covers three city blocks, anchored on the west end by upscale grocery store Gelson's (recently closed), on the east end by Macy's (also closed) and Regal Cinemas centers the middle ...
Pasadena [72] Plaza Pasadena, now Paseo Colorado: Pasadena: August 16, 1980 [72] Charles Kober & Assoc. 153,000 [72] demolished originally planned to become a Sears store. Number recycled from Utah location/was Macy's until 2013. The site was demolished in 2015 and has been rebuilt as a Hyatt Place hotel. 44 Santa Monica Place Santa Monica ...
Boadway Bros. or Boadway's was a chain of upscale department stores in Southern California and New Mexico during the 1910s and 1920s, which started with a single store in Pasadena carrying furniture. First Pasadena store
Pasadena City Hall, currently the tallest building in Pasadena. ... 790 East Colorado: 160 ft (49 m) 9: 1981 9: 251 South Lake (Corporate Center Pasadena)
The store in Pasadena was the last free standing store as the concept of the shopping mall began to take off. The first stores adjacent or connected to shopping malls opened in Panorama City in the San Fernando Valley (late 1950s), Anaheim Plaza, on upper State Street in Santa Barbara (1960s), and Glendale.