- Source: The Hahn Company
The Hahn Company, San Diego, California, alternately known as Ernest W. Hahn, Inc., was a major American shopping center owner and developer from the 1950s to the 1980s. Purchased by the Trizec Corp. in 1980 (which then took the name TrizecHahn), it became defunct.
Corporate history
The company was founded and managed by Ernest W. Hahn (1919–1992). During its 30 years of existence the company built 45 shopping malls in 18 states, from Florida to Oregon. Their first major project was the regional shopping mall La Cumbre Plaza in Santa Barbara, California, which opened in 1967. Hahn went on to become the largest mall builder in the West.
The innovative Horton Plaza mall in downtown San Diego, which opened in 1985, helped lead the rejuvenation of the city's downtown area. It was the first successful downtown retail center since the rise of suburban shopping centers decades earlier. Hahn had previously built the Fashion Valley and Parkway Plaza malls in San Diego.
In 1980 Trizec Corporation, of Toronto, Ontario, acquired the company's shopping center interests. Trizec took the new name TrizecHahn to reflect the purchase. TrizecHahn exited the shopping center business in 1998. The majority of its properties west of Las Vegas were acquired by Westfield America, Inc. (precursor to The Westfield Group) and those east of Las Vegas by The Rouse Company.
Projects
La Cumbre Plaza (1967) - Santa Barbara, California
Valley Plaza Mall (1967) - Bakersfield, California
Montclair Plaza (1968) - Montclair, California
Fashion Valley Mall (1969) - San Diego, California
Galleria at Tyler (1970) - Riverside, California
Downtown Plaza (1971; portions of the mall were demolished in 2014 and later redeveloped) - Sacramento, California
Los Cerritos Center (1971) - Cerritos, California
Sunrise Mall (1971) - Citrus Heights, California
Westfield Oakridge (1971) - San Jose, California
Fashion Place (1972) - Murray, Utah
Parkway Plaza (1972) - El Cajon, California
Laguna Hills Mall (1973) - Laguna Hills, California
Puente Hills Mall (1974) - Industry, California
Westfield Santa Anita (1974) - Arcadia, California
Mt. Shasta Mall (1975) - Redding, California
Rimrock Mall (1975) Billings, Montana
Newmarket North Mall (1975; redeveloped as NetCenter in 2000) - Hampton, Virginia
Westfield Culver City (1975) - Culver City, California
Pueblo Mall (1976) - Pueblo, Colorado
Capital Mall (1977) - Olympia, Washington
Hawthorne Plaza Shopping Center (1977) - Hawthorne, California
Redlands Mall (1977) - Redlands, California
Vintage Faire Mall (1977) - Modesto, California
Westfield UTC (1977) - University City, San Diego, California
Meadows Mall (1978) - Las Vegas, Nevada
The Oaks (1978) - Thousand Oaks, California
Santa Maria Town Center (1978) - Santa Maria, California
Westdale Mall (1979; demolished in 2014 and is currently under redevelopment) - Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Mesa Mall (1980) - Grand Junction, Colorado
Ogden City Mall (1980; demolished in 2002 and redeveloped as The Junction) - Ogden, Utah
Plaza Pasadena (1980; demolished in 1999 and redeveloped into The Paseo in 2001) - Pasadena, California
Santa Monica Place (1980) - Santa Monica, California
Clackamas Town Center (1981) - Clackamas, Oregon
The Courtyard (1981; redeveloped into Promenade on the Peninsula in 1999) - Rolling Hills Estates, California
San Mateo Fashion Island (1981; demolished in 1996 and redeveloped into Bridgepointe Shopping Center in 1997) - San Mateo, California
Fashion Show Mall (1981) - Paradise, Nevada
Mall of Memphis (1981; demolished in 2004) - Memphis, Tennessee
Solano Town Center (1981) - Fairfield, California
Long Beach Plaza (1982; demolished in 2000 and redeveloped into Long Beach City Place in 2003) - Long Beach, California
Westfield Palm Desert (1982) - Palm Desert, California
Santa Rosa Plaza (1983) - Santa Rosa, California
The Village at Corte Madera (1985) - Corte Madera, California
Westfield Horton Plaza (1985) - San Diego, California
Westfield North County (1986) - Escondido, California
Westfield Valley Fair (1986) - Santa Clara, California
Three Rivers Mall (1987) - Kelso, Washington
Bridgewater Commons (1988) - Bridgewater, New Jersey
East Hills Mall (1988) - Bakersfield, California
Sierra Vista Mall (1988) - Clovis, California
Towson Town Center (1991 expansion wing) - Towson, Maryland
Prudential Center (1993) - Boston, Massachusetts
Park Meadows (1996) - Lone Tree, Colorado
Prizm Outlets (1998) - Primm, Nevada
Miracle Mile Shops (2000) - Paradise, Nevada
Ovation Hollywood (2001) - Hollywood, Los Angeles, California
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Scott Hahn
- Reynaldo Hahn
- Kathryn Hahn
- Fashion Place
- Hollywood and Highland Center
- In the End
- Diskografi Linkin Park
- The Silent Service
- Brooke Smith
- Hybrid Theory
- The Hahn Company
- Hahn
- Horton Plaza (shopping mall)
- Hahn Brewery
- Kathryn Hahn
- Kristin Hahn
- James Hahn
- Hahn Group
- Frankfurt–Hahn Airport
- Otto Hahn