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Pages in category "Department stores of Australia" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B. Big W; D.
This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items. (January 2016) There are many different types of shopping centres in Australia. In 2018, the Shopping Centre Council of Australia Identified Australia has had 1,630 existing shopping centres, being defined as a major Integrated retail centre with at least 1,000 m 2 (11,000 sq ft) of lettable retail floor-space, with over 65,000 ...
Sydney's Royal Arcade, since demolished. This arcade, one of the earliest examples of a shopping centre in Australia and one of many of its kind in Sydney's city centre, ran from George Street near the markets, through to Pitt Street. Broadway Shopping Centre, Sydney CBD; Central Park Mall, Sydney CBD; The Galeries, Sydney CBD; Glasshouse ...
Store entrance, Anthony Hordern and Sons, Sydney, 1933–1936. On 10 July 1901 the Haymarket premises was destroyed by fire. Business was resumed almost immediately in the Exhibition Building, Prince Alfred Park, and a new building "New Palace Emporium" or "Senior Store" erected on the site of the original Brickfield Hill store in 1905.
Department stores of Australia (2 C, 9 P) E. Eyewear retailers of Australia (6 P) F. Food retailers of Australia (3 C) Furniture retailers of Australia (11 P) H.
Myer grew by developing its own stores (becoming one of Australia's major property owners and developers in the process) and acquiring other department stores, including Adelaide's Marshall's and Bell's (Victor Harbor, Mount Barker, Murray Bridge and Strathalbyn and Tailem Bend) in South Australia, Western Australia's Boans in 1984, Queensland ...
The centre was refurbished in 1984 and further upgraded in 1996 and 2000. Centrepoint was purchased by the Westfield Group in December 2001 and later renamed to Westfield Centrepoint and housed over 140 stores. [6] Westfield Centrepoint provided skybridge connections to two of Australia's major department stores, Myer and David Jones. There was ...
The early popularity of these stores led to Woolworths establishing hypermarkets around Australia using the Woolworths Family Centre name. However the concept failed to perform, and the hypermarkets were re-established as separated Woolworths supermarkets and Big W discount department stores in the late 1970s to early 1980s.