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San Antonio Shopping Center

Coordinates:37°24′10″N122°6′31″W / 37.40278°N 122.10861°W /37.40278; -122.10861
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shopping mall in California, United States
San Antonio Center
Sign of San Antonio Center at California & Pacchetti in October 2022
Map
LocationMountain View, California, United States
Coordinates37°24′10″N122°6′31″W / 37.40278°N 122.10861°W /37.40278; -122.10861
Address2550 W. El Camino Real
Opening date1950; 76 years ago (1950)
DeveloperErnest W. Hahn
ManagementMerlone Geier Partners
Owner
  • Federal Realty (original center)
  • Merlone Geier Partners (The Village)
  • Los Altos School District (Kohl’s parcel)
Stores and services55
Anchor tenants3
Floor area250,000 sq ft (23,000 m2)
Floors1-8
Parking7,692
Websitesanantoniocenter.com

San Antonio Shopping Center is an outdoorshopping center located onEl Camino Real and San Antonio Road inMountain View, California, United States, in theSan Francisco Bay Area. The shopping center consists of two areas, owned by two separate companies.

  • The namesakeSan Antonio Shopping Center is a traditional outdoorpower center anchored byTrader Joe's,Walmart, and24 Hour Fitness. It is owned byFederal Realty. In late December 2019, the land occupied byKohl's, 24 Hour Fitness (which has consolidated into another pre-existing, expanded location within the shopping center),JOANN Fabrics, and several other businesses was sold to theLos Altos School District for $155 million for the businesses to eventually be demolished for a neighborhood school for students in the area.
  • The Village at San Antonio Center is a newer mixed-use property with apartments, restaurants, aHyatt Centric hotel, aShowplace ICON movie theater, and aSafeway supermarket. It is owned by Merlone Geier Partners.[1] It also houses a park along with a fenced off dog park.

History

[edit]

Starting in the 1950s, the center was an open-air shopping mall, originally featuringRhodes andSears, with aMervyn's opening later. Over time, the mall was expanded, with the Rhodes converting to Liberty House andJ.C. Penney and aBest catalog showroom added. In the 1970s and 1980s, Atari Games (located nearby) used the Time Zone arcade at the shopping mall to play test all their arcade games. Most of the mall was demolished and partially reconfigured circa 1995[2] to make way forWalmart and additional retail shops.

Sears closed its doors in 2010, three years after it had originally announced its departure.[3] Sears and the surrounding strip of retailers were replaced by phase one of The Village, consisting of a Safeway supermarket, apartments, retail, and restaurants.[4] A second phase, anchored by aShowplace ICON cinema, broke ground in 2015.[5]

In 2019, 9.65 acres (3.91 ha) of the shopping center was sold to the Los Altos School district to build a new school intended to be closer to nearby students thanCovington Elementary School. There were also plans to designate the land as a new site for theBullis Charter School, which had 2 campuses with portable units serving as classrooms, housed at the district's two junior high schools,Egan Junior High School andGeorgina P. Blach Intermediate School. The original plan was to have the school open by 2023, but theCOVID-19 pandemic has since delayed those plans.[6][7]In 2020,JOANN Fabrics,T-Mobile,GameStop, and Luu Noodle permanently closed in preparation for construction; however, the buildings housing the former businesses currently sit vacant. In 2022, the 24 Hour Fitness located at 550 Showers Drive was temporary closed for upgrades. It reopened in November of that year and the location at 2535 California Street permanently closed, consolidating operations to its Showers Drive location. Kohl's was shuttered on January 18, 2025, and demolition is set for later that year. In July of 2025,Alamo Drafthouse opened a new location on the 19th taking over the previousShowplace ICON cinema. The new school is set to open for the 2027–2028 school year.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Discover Premium Retail Properties - Merlone Geier Partners". Merlonegeier.com. RetrievedDecember 24, 2019.
  2. ^"Shop Talk: Adventures in the pre-teen zone". Paloaltoonline.com. November 8, 1995. RetrievedDecember 24, 2019.
  3. ^Sears leaving San Antonio Shopping CenterArchived 2006-07-06 at theWayback Machine
  4. ^"Groundbreaking Kicks off Development of the Village at San Antonio Center - Mountain View, CA Patch". Archived fromthe original on March 13, 2013. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2012.
  5. ^Daniel DeBolt (July 2, 2014)."Deal reached to save Mountain View's Milk Pail | News". Palo Alto Online. RetrievedDecember 24, 2019.
  6. ^"San Antonio Center". Federalrealty.com. RetrievedDecember 24, 2019.
  7. ^"Los Altos School District". www.mv-voice.com. RetrievedApril 22, 2021.

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See also:History of retail in Southern California – History of retail in Palm Springs — Note: starred (*) listings indicate former regional mall now site of strip-style community center with new name
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