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This is an alphabetical list of shopping centres in Hong Kong. Most of Hong Kong 's shopping centres are in the new towns in the New Territories . Many Hong Kong shopping centres are attached to housing estates or commercial office towers.
Paris — Champs-Élysées, [9] [13] Boulevard Haussmann, Rue de Rivoli, Boulevard des Capucines, Rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré, Avenue Montaigne, Avenue George V, the axis formed by Rue de Castiglione, Place Vendôme, Rue de la Paix and Place de l'Opéra, Rue de Sèvres, Rue du Bac, Rue des Francs-Bourgeois (along with other streets in Le ...
The ONE is a shopping centre in Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong. It is built on the site of the former Tung Ying Building at 100 Nathan Road. [1] It was developed by Chinese Estates Holdings and opened in 2010. Owner Joseph Lau Luen-hung gifted the property to his wife in 2017. [2]
MegaBox (shopping mall) Metro City (Hong Kong) Metro Harbour View; Metroplaza; Mikiki; Millennium City, Hong Kong; Mira Place; Mong Kok Computer Centre; MOSTown; N ...
The exit to Elements from Kowloon MTR station The "Void" above the Metal Zone Metal Zone has several luxury stores Symbols of the five elemental zones. Elements is located directly above the Kowloon MTR station, and connected to the International Commerce Centre, residential complexes and hotels above the mall, as well as a pedestrian footbridge linking to the M+ Museum and the West Kowloon ...
Kowloon City Plaza (KCP; Chinese: 九龍城廣場) is a shopping centre located at Kowloon City, Kowloon, Hong Kong. [1] [2] It was established in 1993, and it underwent a HK$100-million renovation from October 2005 to December 2006. The shopping centre re-opened on 26 January 2007. [1]
An IKEA store, one of four in Hong Kong, occupies 120,000 square feet (11,000 m 2) of the uppermost podium levels and was the largest in Hong Kong until the Kowloon Bay store relocated from Telford Gardens to MegaBox. [2] Atop the shopping levels are two office towers which provide more than 620,000 square feet (58,000 m 2) of office space. [3]
In 2002, Hongkong Land announced a 1 billion dollar plan—The Landmark Scheme—to renovate The Landmark. The whole scheme included extending the existing shopping atrium to 3/F and 4/F of the building, introducing a department store Harvey Nichols and a hotel The Landmark Mandarin Oriental Hotel, and the redevelopment of The Landmark East into a new 14-floor office tower named York House.