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College Grove Shopping Center

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College Grove Shopping Center
Map
LocationSan Diego, CA 92115
Coordinates32°44′27″N 117°03′22″W / 32.7407°N 117.056°W / 32.7407; -117.056
Opening dateJuly 28, 1960
DeveloperMichael Birkant, Phillip Lyons, George A. Scott
ArchitectJohn Graham & Company
Total retail floor area650,000 sq ft (60,000 m2) (at opening)
Public transit accessBus transport MTS: 856 (weekends), 916, 917

College Grove Shopping Center, also Marketplace at the Grove, at SR-94 at College Avenue in Oak Park, San Diego, on the border of Lemon Grove, is an open-air shopping center, but was originally a regional shopping mall, only the second to be built in San Diego County, and the 37th in the country. It opened July 28, 1960 with an official grand opening ceremony on August 25, 1960. The site had 650,000 sq ft (60,000 m2) of gross leasable space on its 70-acre (28 ha) site. The $28-million center had 60 stores (of which 20 were open at launch) and parking for 6,000 cars on two levels. There was a three-story branch of Walker Scott, the San Diego–based department store. More than 250,000 people attended the first day the center was open. There was a heliport with helicopter service to Lindbergh Field. A new amenity offered was "park-a-tot" child care.[1]

The architect was John Graham & Company of Seattle.

There was also a 2-level (36,900 square foot) J.C. Penney, and J.J. Newberry and F.W. Woolworth variety stores. A one-level Mervyn's was added in the 1970s. In the mid-1980s the City of San Diego wished to have the center become a 4-anchor enclosed mall, but anchor tenants could not be secured. Instead the center relaunched as Marketplace at the Grove in November 1988. By the late 1990s the mall was half-vacant and in 1999 what remained of the original center was demolished leaving Mervyn's and the mall's Longs Drugs store, and the site was turned into a strip style power center, with the Mervyn's and a new HomeBase, Staples, Pic 'N' Save, Sam's Club and Walmart. HomeBase opened for business in December 1999, followed by Sam's Club, which made its debut in February 2000. Walmart welcomed its first shoppers on March 15 of the same year. Since 2002, Pic 'N' Save became Big Lots. Since 2003 the HomeBase site has been a Target. Since 2009 the Mervyn's site has been a Kohl's. In 2010 the Longs Drugs site became a Ross Dress For Less. In 2014, Staples closed, replacing it with a Sam Ash Music store two years later.[2]

The Walker Scott building was demolished in 1987 to make way for a Mann 9-cinema multiplex. An iconic neon baton-majorette stood over the Mann 9 Theatres (now Sam's Club), from 1988 to 1999, before being moved to the front of the shopping center where artwork currently stands. Prior to display at the shopping center, the artwork was at the back of the College Drive-in's screen and shone onto El Cajon Boulevard for 36 years.[3][4][5]


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References

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  1. ^ "College Grove Stores Open Today". San Diego Union Tribune. July 28, 1960.
  2. ^ "College Grove Shopping Center", Mall Hall of Fame
  3. ^ College Grove Center business page on Facebook
  4. ^ Cooley, Kathleen H. (August 9, 1985). "Neon Majorette Returning to the College Limelight". Los Angeles Times.
  5. ^ "Campus Drive-In in San Diego, CA - Cinema Treasures". cinematreasures.org. Retrieved 2024-10-04. One of the most memorable features of this drive-in was the 46 foot high drum majorette outlined in neon lights that twirled a baton. Today the neon lighted drum majorette is "alive and well" and resides at the College Grove Shopping Center which replaced this drive-in.