Stanton rounds up new Beach Boulevard food and lifestyle center, Rodeo 39
Mention that youâre headed to Stanton and youâre likely to hear something along the lines of: Whereâs Stanton?
But a new public market is putting the tiny city on Orange Countyâs map in a big way.
Rodeo 39 is the creation of San Juan Capistrano developer Dan Almquist, a managing partner at Frontier Real Estate Investments.
It was Stanton (population 36,000) city leaders who came to him. They had a blighted 24 acres on Beach Boulevard just off the 22 Freeway, and did he want to take crack at it?
He accepted the challenge, seeing a chance to break out of the traditional shopping center mold and create a collection of shops and eateries that was more along the lines of a hangout, something experiential.
âI felt vested in doing something right by the city,â says Almquist, 43. âStanton was always a little bit of an underdog. The community deserved more.â
While food is the foundation of Rodeo 39 (and it is a carnival of food), donât call it a food hall.
âThe food hall concept ⌠you eat, but then what?â Almquist says. âI wanted to create a place that goes beyond a transactional environment, somewhere you want to spend time.â
So in addition to an Insta-worthy floral boutique and a bakery, Rodeo 39 has a retro arcade, a raw bar, a tea bar, a cocktail bar, a coffee shop and even a small stage for that exciting day when live music can resume.
Rodeoâs biggest vendor coup though is scoring Skin Design Tattoo, which is owned by Robert Pho, who many argue is the best tattoo artist in the nation. Just to put it into perspective, Skin Design now has locations in Las Vegas, New York City, Honolulu â and Stanton.
Almquist says it was Pho who reached out to him.
âThere were people early on that just kind of got what we were doing,â he says.
Skin Design already has a wait list, and Rodeoâs grand opening isnât even untilOct. 17-18.
âItâs insane, the stuff they do,â Almquist says of Phoâs team. âItâs art.â
Thatâs why he put Skin Design in a glass box. So you can watch the artists at work.
Stantonâs first craft brewery, Bearded Tang, is also here behind glass, so you can watch them make the beer â and then drink it. There are 24 on tap.
Almquist says he wanted âan element of voyeurism,â just like you find at a real rodeo.
âPeople like to people watch,â he says.
There are plenty of places to do it here. All sorts of seating is scattered throughout the 41,000-square-foot space, both inside and out, from counter seating to cozy cafe tables with scoop chairs.
The hard part wonât be finding a table, but deciding what youâre going to bring to that table.
There are 18 food choices, and theyâre all over the map, from Vietnamese street crepes and Japanese ramen to Detroit deep-dish pizza, Hawaiin-style Kimchi Butter Chicken Katsu, artisanal vegan donuts and Filipino rice bowls.
âWe wanted diversity,â Almquist says.
Vendors include Kra Z Kaiâs, OCâs first Laotian BBQ spot. Beleaf Burgers sells vegan takes on popular fast-food sandwiches like McDonaldâs Filet-O-Fish (their version of In-N-Outâs Single is some kind of trickery). At the artisan butcher shop Primal Cuts you can pick your own steak or burger from the case and have them cook it for you the way you like.
Rodeo 39 also has eight pop-up shops, currently selling street-wear inspired clothes, kitschy sunglasses, handmade jewelry and retro cowgirl handbags (from a real traveling rodeo vendor).
Stanton Councilman Rigoberto Ramirez said city leaders and residents are loving the Rodeo limelight.
âIt checks off all the boxes,â he says. âIt gives us an opportunity to be relevant and change the perception of the city. And as a 25-year Stanton resident Iâm stoked, because now I have somewhere to go and entertain family and friends, as well.â
He said the project seed was planted nearly six years ago when the city began holding what would eventually be 102 neighborhood meetings to decide Stantonâs future.
âPeople said, âYa know, what we need is a point of destination, where we can play, hangout, have fun.â
Next city leaders did 280 business visits.
âAnd the businesses said âWe need a destination point. When we talk to customers, they really donât know where Stanton is.ââ
The crazy thing is, says Ramirez, is that every day roughly 79,000 cars pass the Beach Boulevard exit where Rodeo 39 now sits. Thatâs 79,000 opportunities that Stanton missed every day â until now.
In the eyes of Mayor Dave Shawver: âWe have just added a crown jewel to the city of Stanton.â
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