District at Jurupa Valley bringing 1,200 housing units, shopping, logistics to 250-acre site
Jurupa Valley and real estate investors unveiled plans Thursday to build one of the region’s largest mixed-use developments with housing, retail and warehousing sprawling across 250 acres.
The District at Jurupa Valley will include a shopping center with a Vallarta Supermarket mega-store spanning 60,000 square feet as an anchor. A four-story, 122-room Woodspring Suites, owned by Choice Hotels International, also is planned.
Choice is one of the largest hotel franchisors in the world and has Woodspring Suites in the nearby communities of Colton and Corona, according to officials associated with the development.
Vallarta, which is one of the largest Hispanic-run supermarkets chains in Southern California, recently opened a new format store in Rancho Cucamonga.
Maurico Oberfield with the development firm DO Capital Group said the project began more than eight years ago.
Over the past two years, environmental and city development permits were approved for the 250-acre site, which will include a shopping center with restaurants and major retail chain storefronts, a hotel, supermarket, nearly 1,200 residential units on 42 acres, and 1.5 million square feet of industrial and logistics space.
The development is planned at the corner of 30th Street and Frontage Road, opposite the 60 Freeway eastbound on-ramp.
“This is a massive undertaking,” Oberfield told the Southern California News Group of the development that has a footprint roughly the size of two Disneyland Parks.
DO Capital, which is based in the Beverly Grove neighborhood of Los Angeles with offices in Corona Del Mar, also is involved in development of apartments in Indio on the eastern fringe of the Coachella Valley, and luxury bungalows in North Hollywood.
Santa Ana-based Red Mountain Group is handling the shopping center development for the project. The development will include over 300,000 square feet of commercial office space and retail space.
Large construction scrapers have already begun working the area just west of the Santa Ana River - a typically dry and rocky area that separates Riverside to the east and Jurupa Valley, a sleepy town that has been trying to shake off its tarnished image after a tiny section was earmarked as a Superfund cleanup site by the Environmental Protection Agency in the early 1980s.
The so-called Stringfellow Quarry Co. for decades dumped more than 34 million gallons of liquid industrial waste into the ground. City officials say the Stringfellow site in the Pyrite Canyon area at the northern edge of Jurupa Valley is more than 4 miles away and has no impact on new development.
Jurupa Valley Mayor Brian Berkson said more than $130 million worth of planned bridge upgrades and widening along Mission Boulevard and Market Street will connect Riverside and Jurupa Valley to provide a possible wave of new shoppers to his community. The bridges cross over the barren Santa Ana River that divides the communities.
He said that Jurupa Valley has opened nearly 20 businesses since early 2025 - especially along Limonite Avenue where a Target store opened in August 2025 in The Shops at Jurupa Valley, a new 32-acre retail center.
Besides the Vallarta, a Sprouts Farmers Market recently opened at the Spectrum Shopping Center along Limonite as well.
“I’ve done dozens of ribbon cuttings over the past year,” Berkson said.
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This story was originally published June 4, 2026 at 4:57 PM.