place

Maloney Field at Laird Q. Cagan Stadium

1973 establishments in CaliforniaCalifornia sports venue stubsCollege soccer venues in CaliforniaCollege soccer venues in the United StatesSports venues completed in 1973
Sports venues in Santa Clara County, CaliforniaSports venues in the San Francisco Bay AreaStanford University buildings and structures

Maloney Field at Laird Q. Cagan Stadium is a soccer-specific stadium on the campus of Stanford University in Stanford, California. The stadium hosts the Stanford Cardinal men's and women's soccer teams, as well as the women's lacrosse team. The facility opened in 1973, and featured renovations in 1997 and 2011. In addition to Cardinal matches, the stadium has been used as a practice training ground for the United States men's and women's national soccer team. The stadium has also been used as a venue for Major League Soccer's San Jose Earthquakes for practices and U.S. Open Cup fixtures. The current capacity since the 2011 renovation is 2,952.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Maloney Field at Laird Q. Cagan Stadium (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Maloney Field at Laird Q. Cagan Stadium
Nelson Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Maloney Field at Laird Q. Cagan StadiumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.4331017 ° E -122.1580511 °
placeShow on map

Address

Maloney Field

Nelson Road
94301
California, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Town & Country Village (Palo Alto)
Town & Country Village (Palo Alto)

Town & Country Village is an outdoor shopping center in Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, California, United States, opened in 1953. The shopping center is at the corner of El Camino Real and Embarcadero Road, opposite Stanford University and Palo Alto High School. The land was previously a Mexican land grant, Rancho del Arroyo de San Francisquito, which was divided into smaller lots after it passed to heirs of the original grantee. The mall land was a 14-acre (5.7 ha) parcel that had come to be known as "the Greer property." The design allowed the preservation of 70 to 100 mature oak trees. The buildings were constructed, in part, from salvaged fir and redwood logging trestles built in the early 1840s further north in the state. There was originally 100,000 ft2 (9,300 m2) of retail space and 1,200 parking spaces. The developer was Palo Alto resident Ronald Williams (1908–2001), and the construction company was Bayshore Construction. Williams developed three other "outdoor retail centers" around the same time, including at sites in nearby San Jose and Sunnyvale. The San Jose location was built in 1959 in the same architectural style at the intersection of Stevens Creek Boulevard and Winchester. The mall was marketed as having "the leisurely atmosphere of the Old West" while being "easy to get to" with "over 1,000 parking spaces." Early tenants included AE Cramer's Toy Box, Hinkley's Fine Men's Wear, Stickney's Hick'ry House, and Edy's Ice Cream Shop. By 1957 there were 75 shops open in the mall, and a "Town & Country Playtown for kids, with a car ride, merry-go-round, and train exhibition." A sandwich shop called the Village Cheese House was in business from 1959 until 2019. By the late 1990s two anchor tenants—the Hickory House and John's Town & Country Market grocery store—had closed and their spaces had languished unrented; critics argued that "the center's old-time feel, signs and marketing [had become] more tired than nostalgic." Williams died in 2001, and Ellis Partners bought the mall from his heirs in 2004. In 2005 there was 171,000 ft2 (15,900 m2) of office and retail space.