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Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Kappa Shopping Center (Timisoara) References This page was last edited on 20 June 2024 ...
Bega Shopping Center has a main building and two wings. The main building consists of basement, ground floor and four floors with a total commercial area of 8,600 m 2 (93,000 sq ft), of which 7,200 m 2 (78,000 sq ft) are the shopping venue. [4]
The Romanian print press market is rich and diversified. The National Institute of Statistics (NIS) counted up to 300 newspaper publishers in 2007, of which 159 dailies, and over 350 magazine publishers. 300 of them are audited by the Romanian Audit Bureau of Circulation (BRAT), hence gaining in credibility and advertising revenues.
The mall is built on an 18-hectare plot of land and has a leasable area of 70,000 m 2. [2] The two-story construction has 110 shops, 2,700 on-site and above-ground parking spaces with electric/hybrid car charging stations, a self-service car wash and bicycle racks. [3]
The concept of modern, big and self-service store came to Romania in mid-1990s. Since mid-2000s, there has been a strong growth in the number of supermarkets in the country, particularly in Bucharest and other main urban areas.
The real estate market in Timișoara, supported by the upward economic trend, has been booming lately. In 2017, about 4,000 living spaces were delivered to the market, [ 152 ] an increase of almost 60% compared to the previous year, most of the projects representing high-rise residential complexes, addressed to the mass and mid-market segments.
The first attempts to create a metropolitan area appeared in 1999–2000, when Timișoara and six peri-urban communes in the first ring surrounding the city (Dumbrăvița, Ghiroda, Giroc, Moșnița Nouă, Săcălaz and Sânmihaiu Român) entered into a local partnership. [3]
The construction of the cathedral was carried out during two decades, in two stages: 1736–1751 and 1755–1774, respectively. Although there is no evidence of this, it seems that the one who drew up the plan of the cathedral was Joseph Emanuel Fischer von Erlach, the then director of the Imperial Construction Office in Vienna and a very good connoisseur of the Baroque style. [1]