Downtown San Bernardino's Small Business Momentum Signals a New Chapter for the City's Future by Sadie Collins - City News Group, Inc.
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Downtown San Bernardino's Small Business Momentum Signals a New Chapter for the City's Future

By Sadie Collins, Community Writer
July 1, 2026 at 01:33pm. Views: 42

As San Bernardino continues working toward a long-term vision for its downtown, small businesses are quietly becoming one of the city's greatest success stories. While large redevelopment projects often receive the headlines, it is the steady arrival of entrepreneurs, family-owned shops, restaurants, professional offices, and neighborhood services that are creating new reasons for residents to spend time in the city's historic core.

Unlike a single groundbreaking ceremony or ribbon cutting, downtown revitalization happens one storefront at a time. Each new business represents an investment in the community, confidence in the local economy, and an opportunity to strengthen the neighborhood through jobs, services, and activity.

 

Although several large redevelopment initiatives remain in various planning stages, including the future of the former Carousel Mall property, city leaders continue moving forward with long-range economic development strategies designed to attract investment and encourage sustainable growth throughout downtown. The city's Downtown Development Project and broader planning efforts envision a mixed-use district featuring housing, retail, entertainment, office space, and walkable public gathering areas.

For longtime residents, the conversation surrounding downtown has evolved considerably over the past two decades. Once the commercial heart of the Inland Empire, downtown San Bernardino experienced years of economic challenges following changing retail patterns, the closure of major department stores, and the eventual decline of the Carousel Mall. The mall, which served generations of local families, ultimately closed before being demolished to prepare the site for future redevelopment.

Today, that same property represents one of Southern California's most closely watched urban redevelopment opportunities. City officials continue pursuing a mixed-use vision that would transform approximately 43 acres into a destination combining residential neighborhoods, shopping, offices, entertainment, and public spaces intended to reconnect downtown with surrounding districts. While the selection of a long-term development partner remains an ongoing process, planning efforts continue as officials refine the broader Downtown Specific Plan that will guide future investment.

Yet even before cranes arrive at the former mall site, another transformation is already underway.

Independent businesses continue choosing San Bernardino because they recognize opportunities that larger corporations sometimes overlook. Lower startup costs compared with many neighboring cities, access to regional transportation corridors, and a diverse local customer base have encouraged entrepreneurs to establish restaurants, coffee shops, beauty salons, professional services, specialty retailers, and creative studios throughout the city.

These businesses often begin with modest goals. A family opens a restaurant serving recipes passed down through generations. A local artist transforms a vacant storefront into a gallery. An accountant or insurance professional leases office space to better serve neighborhood clients. Collectively, these investments generate employment, increase foot traffic, and contribute to the local tax base while providing convenient services close to home.

 

Challenges remain. Redeveloping a historic downtown requires patience, coordination, and significant investment. Infrastructure improvements, property redevelopment, housing construction, and business recruitment are complex efforts that take years rather than months to complete. City officials have acknowledged that the transformation of the downtown district will occur in phases rather than all at once.

Nevertheless, progress is often measured in everyday moments rather than major announcements. A newly occupied storefront, a busy sidewalk during lunch, families attending a community event, or visitors discovering a neighborhood restaurant all contribute to rebuilding momentum.

 

 

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