Orangefair Marketplace
Orangefair Marketplace is a community shopping center in Fullerton, California which when built was one of the earliest large shopping centers in Orange County, California. along with Anaheim Plaza and Orange County Plaza. It is located at the southeast corner of Harbor Boulevard (originally Spadra Road) and Orangethorpe Avenue, a mile south of Fullerton's historic downtown.
History
The plans for the Orangefair Center, as it was first known, shopping center were announced in 1955. It was to cost $8–10 million, be built on 32 acres (13 ha) with parking for 3000 cars.[1] it was to include:[2]
- a 63,000-square-foot (5,900 m2) J. C. Penney department store
- a 35,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) W. T. Grant variety store
- a 34,000-square-foot (3,200 m2) Mayfair supermarket
- a 7,200-square-foot (670 m2) Woolworth's variety store
for a total of 305,000 square feet (28,300 m2) of gross leasable area.
The center opened in 1956 as did the new Houston Freeway, which together with what was then called the Santa Ana Canyon Freeway, now form the 91 (Riverside) Freeway.[3]
In 1957 a $4,000,000, 300,000 square feet (28,000 m2) extension was built which, among other new stores, included Long's Drugs and a new branch of Rankin's, a Santa Ana department store, the only one it would ever build, but only operated for part of 1959 before closing.
Orangefair was an open air mall surrounded by parking lots, with a pedestrian mall in a T shape on the interior, which is now closed off and used for service vehicles.
In 1967, Penney's opened a totally new and much larger store, which it called the first "Total Penney's" and its first "complete department store" in Orange County.[4] A Boston Stores junior department store opened in the space in 1968.[5]
During an era when owners of older shopping center became concerned about upgrading their facilities in light of competition from new centers, plans in 1976-7 called for the building of a bridge over Harbor Blvd. and incorporating the site of a Montgomery Ward store (now Target) store on the west side of Harbor.[6] These never came to fruition.
In 1993, JCPenney closed and relocated to Brea Mall, which led to the creation of a new power center of today, now anchored by Burlington, Best Buy and Marshalls. The former JCPenney building first operated as a HomeBase store before becoming Burlington afterwards. There are additional community-size open air centers across the streets immediately to the north (Fullerton Town Center, with a Costco (formerly Price Club), Ross Dress For Less (formerly Silo Electronics and later Office Depot), and Amazon Fresh (formerly Toys R Us)), east (Walmart (formerly Zody's/later Food 4 Less), and south (Lowe's and Curacao).
References
- ^ "Shops Area Being Built". Los Angeles Times. February 26, 1956.
- ^ "Plans for Shop Center Slated". Los Angeles Times. November 27, 1955. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
- ^ "Freeway Link Near Placentia Open Today". Los Angeles Times. April 10, 1956.
- ^ "Advertisement for Penney's". Los Angeles Times. August 23, 1967. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
- ^ "Boston Store to open two new Orange County units". Los Angeles Times. April 28, 1968.
- ^ Boettner, Jack (March 11, 1977). "Fullerton Agency OKs New Plans for Orangefair". Los Angeles Times.
33°51′28″N 117°55′24″W / 33.8578°N 117.9234°W / 33.8578; -117.9234
- v
- t
- e
with origins in
Central Los Angeles |
|
---|---|
L.A. neighborhoods |
|
Long Beach |
|
Pasadena | |
Rest of L.A. Co. |
|
Bakersfield | |
Inland Empire |
|
Orange Co. |
|
San Diego–Tijuana |
|
Elsewhere |
- Bond's
- Brooks Clothing
- C. H. Baker shoes
- C&R Clothiers
- Hartfield's
- Judy's
- Leed's shoes
- Mandel's (shoes)
- Miller's Outpost/Anchor Blue
- Victor Clothing
- Weatherby-Kayser shoes
- Zachary All
membership stores
- The Akron
- Curacao
- Fedco
- Fedmart
- Gemco
- Pic 'N' Save
- Unimart
- White Front
- Zody's
- Disco Drug and Discount Centers
- Sav-on
- Schwab's Pharmacy
- Thrifty
home furnishings
- Alpha Beta
- Boys Markets
- Chaffee
- Food Giant
- Giant
- Haas, Baruch & Co./Hellman, Haas & Co.
- Hughes Markets
- Market Basket
- Pantry Food Stores
- Pavilions
- Ralphs
- Shopping Bag
- Stater Bros.
- Smart & Final
- Thriftimart
- Tianguis
- Vons
tainment, appliances
- Adray's
- Cal Stereo
- Federated Group
- Golden Bear Home and Sport Centers
- Ken Crane's
- Leo's Stereo
- Pacific Stereo
- Rogersound Labs
- University Stereo
- Builders Emporium
- National Lumber
- Ole's Home Centers
- Licorice Pizza
- Music Plus
- Peaches Records and Tapes
- The Wherehouse
- Wallichs Music City
- Los Angeles:
- Plaza
- 1880s-90s CBD
- Broadway (CBD)
- Broadway & 87th, South L.A.*
- Seventh St.
- Flower St.
- Hollywood Blvd.
- Lankershim, North Hollywood
- Miracle Mile, Wilshire Blvd.
- Westwood Village (near UCLA)
- Other cities:
- Beverly Hills: Rodeo Drive
- Burbank: Golden Mall
- Huntington Park: Pacific Blvd.
- Long Beach: Pine St.
- Palm Springs: La Plaza/Palm Canyon Dr. - See also History of retail in Palm Springs
- Pasadena: Lake Ave.
- Pasadena: Old Pasadena
- Santa Ana: 4th St.
- Santa Monica: Main St. - 3rd St. Promenade
shopping center
"firsts"
- Oldest origins of a major L.A. chain: Harris & Frank (1876) - 1st dept. store on Broadway: A. Fusenot Co./Ville de Paris - 1st dept. store on 7th off Broadway: J. W. Robinson's (1915) - 1st planned shopping district: Westwood Village (1929) - 1st suburban dept. store branch: B. H. Dyas/Broadway Hollywood (1927) - 1st center with multiple supermarkets: Broadway & 87th Street shopping center (1936) - 1st center with department store anchor: Broadway-Crenshaw Center (1947) - 1st enclosed mall: Lakewood Center (1951) - 1st mall in Orange County: Anaheim Plaza (1955) - 1st center with 4 dept. stores: Panorama City Shopping Center (1964)