La Cumbre Plaza

La Cumbre Plaza
Coordinates 34°26′19″N 119°44′56″W / 34.438583°N 119.748803°W / 34.438583; -119.748803Coordinates: 34°26′19″N 119°44′56″W / 34.438583°N 119.748803°W / 34.438583; -119.748803
Address 121 South Hope Avenue
Santa Barbara, California 93105
United States
Opening date 1967
Developer The Hahn Company
Management Macerich
Owner Macerich
No. of stores and services 50+
No. of anchor tenants 3
Total retail floor area 491,000 sq ft (45,600 m2)
No. of floors 1
Parking Outdoor
Website http://www.shoplacumbre.com/

La Cumbre Plaza is an upscale, outdoor shopping center located in Santa Barbara, California. The first property built by The Hahn Company, La Cumbre Plaza opened in 1967[1] and was purchased by Macerich in 2004.[2] The shopping center spans 491,000 square feet and is anchored by a Vons grocery store and department stores Sears and Macy's.

About

Highlights of La Cumbre Plaza are the influence of Santa Barbara’s missionary settlers as well as an Arts & Crafts styling. The main breezeway with its water fountains, benches and flowering landscape suitably fit the area’s laid back casual lifestyle. Get away...relax...and experience a unique selection of stores and restaurants. La Cumbre Plaza is the exclusive Santa Barbara home to such popular retailers and restaurants as Macy's, Sears, Tiffany & Co., Michael Kors, Lure Fish House, Panera Bread, Pottery Barn, Williams-Sonoma, J. Jill, Talbots, Janie & Jack, and J. Crew. [3]

The phone number for this mall is 805-687-3500.

History

La Cumbre Plaza opened in 1967 with anchors Sears and J.W. Robinson's. Robinson's changed nameplates several times in its history, settling on Macy's in 2005 due to the merger of Federated and May Department Stores[4]

The mall was a solidly middle-class shopping center until the mid-2000s when new owner Macerich embarked on a remodel that added upscale retailers including Williams-Sonoma, Tiffany & Co., Louis Vuitton, and Ruth's Chris Steak House. The luxury-oriented remodel was at the height of the Great Recession, causing several of these new tenants to close only a few years later. Others have thrived since the remodel, with Michael Kors, Pottery Barn, and other upscale brands still operating.

References

  1. "Ernest Hahn, Pioneer of the Modern Shopping Mall, Dies". The Los Angeles Times. December 29, 1992.
  2. "Macerich Announces the Acquisition of Two California Regional Malls". PRNewswire. July 23, 2004.
  3. "About La Cumbre Plaza". La Cumbre Plaza.
  4. "Robinsons-May to vanish under merger". San Diego Union Tribune. July 25, 2005.
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