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Zara Home is a company that belongs to the Spanish Inditex group dedicated to the manufacturing of home textiles. It was created in 2003. [2] It has around 408 stores in 44 countries. [3] [when?] The company focuses on retailing various housewares. [4] The headquarters of Zara Home is located in A Coruña, Spain.
SM Mall of Asia: 12: Ground Level Entertainment Mall North Wing (EC, [3] IMAX) 2nd Level Entertainment Mall North Wing (Cinemas 7 and 8 [4]) 2nd Level Main Mall [5] (Cinemas 1 to 5, DC) SM Mall of Asia, Bay City, Pasay: Formerly has a XD Cinema, a 4D theater at the IMAX lobby which was opened in November 2014 and closed in April 2017)
SM Mall of Asia (also abbreviated as SM MoA, or simply Mall of Asia or MoA; ), is a large shopping mall in the Philippines, located at Bay City, Pasay, Philippines, within the SM Central Business Park, a reclaimed area within Manila Bay, and the southern end of Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA/C-4).
Mall Image Location Gross floor area Opened Number of shops City Island Group 1 SM Mall of Asia: Pasay: Luzon 589,891 m 2: 2006 3,500+ 2 SM North EDSA: Quezon City: Luzon 497,213 m 2 [2] 1985 1,000+ 3 SM Megamall: Mandaluyong: Luzon 474,225 m 2 [3] 1991 900+ 4 SM Seaside City: Cebu City: Visayas 470,486 m 2 [4] 2015 700+ 5 Festival Mall ...
The first enclosed shopping mall in the metropolis was Crystal Arcade located along Escolta Street in the downtown district of Binondo. This art deco building designed by Andrés Luna de San Pedro also housed the Manila Stock Exchange and was the Philippines' first air-conditioned building inaugurated on June 1, 1932.
Media in category "Shopping malls in Metro Manila" The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total. Greenhills Shopping Center from above.jpg 3,264 × 1,442; 2.23 MB
SM Mall of Asia Arena: Pasay: 20,000 2012 [1] Part of the SM Mall of Asia Complex. Hosted the majority of the games in the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship and 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup as one of the three venues in the Philippines. Smart Araneta Coliseum: Quezon City: 14,429 [2] 1960 Dubbed as "The Big Dome".
The following is a list of sports venues found in the Greater Manila Area in the Philippines which are in current use. In July 2014, the Philippine Sports Stadium and the Philippine Arena opened in Santa Maria and Bocaue , Bulacan .