Location | Pleasanton, California |
---|---|
Opening date | 1980 |
Developer | A. Alfred Taubman |
Management | Simon Property Group |
Owner |
Simon Property Group & GM Pension Trust |
No. of stores and services | 160 [1] |
No. of anchor tenants | 5 |
Total retail floor area | 1.3 million ft² [2] |
No. of floors | 2 |
Public transit access | West Dublin/Pleasanton (BART) |
Website | www.shopstoneridge.com |
Stoneridge Shopping Center is an upscale major shopping mall in Pleasanton, California. The mall is managed and co-owned by Simon Property Group, and is adjacent to Interstate 680.
The mall is anchored by Nordstrom, Macy's, JCPenney, and Sears.
Stoneridge's store selection is a mixture of common mall fixtures such as American Eagle Outfitters, Zumiez, Hot Topic, and Hollister Co. as well as more upscale stores such as Apple Store, Pottery Barn, Godiva, and Williams-Sonoma. Major restaurant chains The Cheesecake Factory, P.F. Chang's China Bistro, and California Pizza Kitchen all have locations bordering the mall, while McDonald's and Panda Express have locations inside.
The mall opened in 1980 and is part of the larger Stoneridge master planned neighborhood originally developed by Stoneson Development Corporation, whose founders also developed Lakeside Village and Stonestown Galleria in nearby San Francisco after World War II.
The mall itself was developed by A. Alfred Taubman, who also developed several other shopping malls in the Bay Area, including Eastridge Mall in San Jose, Hilltop Mall in Richmond and Sunvalley Mall in Concord.[3] The original anchor tenants were Macy's, Emporium-Capwell, and JCPenney. Nordstrom opened a store in 1990, the same year Emporium-Capwell dropped the double-barrelled name and became simply Emporium. Six years later, Emporium was acquired by the parent company of Macy's, which elected to keep both locations; the original Macy's store was used for their women's departments and their men's and home furnishings departments were relocated to the former Emporium store. 1996 also saw the construction and opening of a Sears store.[4]