List of shopping malls in California explained
The following page is a list of shopping malls in the U.S. state of California. The largest malls, with a gross leasable area of at least 400000square feet, are in bold font, with a ranking number based on size and date.
Super-regional enclosed malls
Lifestyle centers / outdoor shopping centers
Mixed-use developments
Regional enclosed malls
Outlet malls
Power centers / outside strip centers
Notable small shopping centers
Dead malls
Abandoned or nearly-unoccupied malls in the state of California.
Demolished / closed malls
- Carousel Mall – San Bernardino (October 11, 1972 – August 22, 2017)
- Country Club Centre – Sacramento (August 21, 1952 – present) – now a conventional outdoor shopping center
- Desert Fashion Plaza – Palm Springs (October 1967 – 2001) – demolished in 2013; now The Block Palm Springs
- Eureka Mall – Eureka – now a conventional outdoor shopping center
- Fallbrook Mall – West Hills (November 12, 1963 – 1997) – now Fallbrook Center
- Florin Mall – Sacramento (February 1968 – February 28, 2006) – now Florin Towne Centre
- Hawthorne Plaza – Hawthorne (1977–1999)
- Horton Plaza – San Diego (August 9, 1985 – 2019)
- La Habra Fashion Square – La Habra (1969–1994) – now La Habra Market Place
- Laurel Plaza – North Hollywood (1968–1994) – now NoHo West
- Long Beach Plaza – Long Beach (1982–2000) – now Long Beach City Place
- Mountain Gate Plaza – Simi Valley
- Palm Springs Mall – Palm Springs
- Redlands Mall – Redlands (1977–2011)
- Sunnyvale Town Center – Sunnyvale (1979–2018) – now Cityline Sunnyvale
- Vallco Shopping Mall – Cupertino (1976–2020)
- Valley Plaza – North Hollywood (August 12, 1951 – present) – most elements abandoned or demolished, some remain
- The Village at Orange – Orange (August 16, 1971 – January 31, 2024) – many exterior tenants remain in business
- Westfield Promenade – Woodland Hills (March 1973 – present)
- Westside Pavilion – West Los Angeles (1985–2019)
There are many more malls throughout the state of California.
See also