Santa Barbara Plaza Marlton Square was created and built in the early 1950s as a retail strip mall. It was then known as
Santa Barbara Plaza due do the fact it was on
Santa Barbara Avenue before it was changed to Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. In 2003, local developers broke ground in the first phase of the Marlton Square
redevelopment project. This phase involved constructing the Buckingham Place Senior
Retirement Community project, a 180-unit
apartment complex, that is adjacent to the
Baldwin Villa Plaza senior housing complex and shopping mall. The project was scheduled to be completed in spring of 2004. Several million dollars of public and private funding were awarded to the project. Although the redevelopment project began with concerns of political
favoritism, it was billed as "the catalytic project for the
Baldwin Hills, Crenshaw communities", and a lynchpin development project for the entire area. While initially promising, financial difficulties and other problems quickly beset the project. Capital Vision Equities' first check to the city bounced in 2001 and the testimony of whistle-blowers lead to an audit by the Ethics Commission early on in the project. Ultimately these problems overwhelmed the developer, and amid complaints of mismanagement the redevelopment of Marlton Square has stalled in bankruptcy. Several other agencies have been involved with the development project, including Keyshawn Capital Development, which is owned and operated by former NFL wide receiver
Keyshawn Johnson. The old retail stores were demolished in May 2011 to make way for future development. By the end of 2009 Buckingham Place was largely finished but had remained unopened due to
bankruptcy. In early 2012 Buckingham Place
housing complex opened.
Mixed-Use Development A opened on September 7, 2017. The facility has a two-mile
walking path and
outdoor plaza. A new outdoor
mixed-use center complex along with new
dining, a
grocery store,
office space and
shopping venues are also being planned to be built by private developers. In 2022, the city request for proposals process selected
Hudson Pacific Properties to enter into an exclusive negotiation agreement to develop the project. ==Transportation==