At the junction of Interstate 680 and Stoneridge Drive in Pleasanton, Stoneridge sits at the commercial core of the Tri-Valley corridor, serving Pleasanton, Dublin, Livermore, and the eastern edge of the Alameda County suburban market. After JCPenney’s February 2026 closure, Macy’s became the sole traditional department store anchor in a 1.3 million square foot regional envelope, a configuration that concentrates comparison-shopping draw around a single anchor without the premium differentiation a Nordstrom or Bloomingdale’s would provide. Apple, The Cheesecake Factory, P.F. Chang’s, and California Pizza Kitchen add the technology and full-service dining draws that sustain productivity when single-anchor comparison shopping defines the department store occasion.
Zara, Uniqlo, H&M, and Cotton On confirm that the fast-fashion and accessible international brand tier is the dominant fashion register at Stoneridge, consistent with a trade area where the affluent San Ramon Valley households tend toward the premium formats in Walnut Creek and Westfield Valley Fair while Stoneridge serves the broader Tri-Valley mass market. Fabletics, lululemon, and JD Sports anchor the activewear and youth athletic positions. The fashion mix also carries Ann Taylor, Chico’s, White House Black Market, Soma, and J. Jill for the women’s accessible-premium category.
POP MART, Build-A-Bear Workshop, and the collectible and novelty retail categories confirm a strong family visit component. The food court F&B carries a distinctive Bay Area cultural mix, including Andersen Bakery, Maruwu Seicha, Onigilly, and Yuyake Dandan Japanese Tapas alongside standard fast-casual operators. The Cheesecake Factory and California Pizza Kitchen anchor the full-service dining occasions that extend evening visit patterns beyond the retail floor.
Dublin/Pleasanton BART station sits within the eastern trade area, giving the corridor transit connectivity that expands the effective catchment into BART-accessible East Bay zones. Stoneridge occupies the comparison-shopping position in the Tri-Valley that Broadway Plaza serves for Contra Costa County: geographic distance and freeway friction from the stronger retail formats in Walnut Creek and San Jose create a captive residential demand base for the property’s mid-market anchor and inline mix.
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