Cinderella City: The Rise and Fall of a Memorable Mall (Part 1)

Blog Topics

Comments

Permalink

Cinderella City was my introduction to large Industrial, Commercial application of Switchgear, Switchboards, Transformers medium and low voltage, and all secondary distribution equipment. She was my teacher/instructor, and mentor for my lifelong career in the Electrical Industry because she was my first hands on project and I learned a lot; I owe her a lot.

Permalink

As others have mentioned, the original site was to be the KLZ transmitter location. The other radio connection was that KGMC had their studios near the fountain. It was Englewood's only radio station and was on 1150kc.

Permalink

I remember there was a really good Mexican restaurant near the front main entrance doors on the main floor. My friends and I use to go there to eat all the time. But I can't remember the name of the place.
You also needed comfortable shoes to get around that place, it was a long walk from one end to the other side of the building.

Permalink

I missed out on going there many years ago. I drove for over one hour from Colorado Springs only to turn around, it was so far from us, but I regret it!

Permalink

Do you remember the 25 foot tall Cinderella figure rotating in one of the open central areas? She was there at Christmas. She wore a sparkling blue gown, her white-blond hair up in elegant curls and held a wee glittering coach in one hand.

Permalink

Cinderella City was not built on a golf course. It was built on a city park, which featured a driving range, miniature golf course, library and swimming pool. The Englewood Golf Course was on the west side of Santa Fe Blvd., now called Broken Tee. Denny Miller field was and still is on the south side of Hampden. It was not bulldozed for the shopping mall, different location.

Permalink

Can I get a list of the clothing stores that carried beautiful alpaca clothing ?

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.