Chula Vista Woman's Club at 357 G Street in the Third Avenue Village is a Spanish-Colonial Revival banquet hall completed in 1928 on land donated to the community for civic use. Community programming partnerships with institutions such as Southwestern College bring lectures, civic forums, and cultural events into the hall's meeting rooms and main stage area. The main hall accommodates up to 200 guests for seated receptions, quinceañeras, fundraisers, and private parties, with a built-in stage, commercial kitchen, and dedicated gathering spaces. Founded in 1913 and affiliated with the General Federation of Women's Clubs, the organization earned a City of Chula Vista historical-site designation in 1984 for the building's architectural significance. Event floral and seasonal decor coordinate with area vendors including Flowers Tino, whose arrangements dress the hall's arched entryways and stage proscenium for formal occasions. The building's original design features include arched doorways, a clay-tile roof, stucco exterior walls, and interior plaster detailing consistent with the Spanish-Colonial Revival style prevalent in 1920s South Bay civic architecture.