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City's İstanbul İçerenköy Ataşehir: Dec Emaar Square Mall Ünalan Üsküdar: MM LC Waikiki; Koçtaş home improvement; Evidea home goods; Address hotel; Deposite: Başak: Başakşehir [4] LC Waikiki; Forum Istanbul Kocatepe Bayrampaşa: 176,380 [11] BO Dec MM IKEA; Galataport: 2021 Karaköy (Galata) Beyoğlu: 400,000 * [12] BE Cruise ship ...
Important "edge cities", i.e. corridors and nodes of business and shopping centers and of tall residential buildings, include the Istanbul Central Business District in and around Şisli; the E-5/D-100 highway corridor along the north side of the old airport, and on the Asian side, Kozyatağı–Ataşehir, Altunizade, Kavacik and Ümraniye.
Istanbul International Finance Center Vakifbank Tower 1: İstanbul: 221 ( 725 ) 43: 2023: 9= Nurol Life: ... İnci Mega 300 m (984 ft) 72 İzmir 2027 2. Merkez Ankara
Zorlu Center is a mixed-use high-rise building complex in the Beşiktaş district of Istanbul, Turkey containing an upscale shopping mall, a five-star Raffles hotel and a Cinemaximum megaplex, as well as residences and offices. It is home to Zorlu PSM, the largest performing arts center in the country, as well as the country's first Apple Store ...
Istanbul is one of the largest cities in Turkey, and is the country's economic and social center. As of October 2020, the city is home to 47 skyscrapers (buildings at least 150 m (490 ft) tall), which is the most in Europe, [ 1 ] as well as hundreds of high-rises .
The Mall of İstanbul (with a dotted capital I, the Turkish spelling of the word İstanbul; abbreviated form MOİ) is a 3,800,000 sq ft (350,000 m 2) mixed-use development in the Başakşehir district of Istanbul, centered around one of Turkey's largest shopping malls with 154,000 m 2 (1,660,000 sq ft) of gross leasable area.
Metropol İstanbul is a mixed-use skyscraper complex in Ertuğrul in the Ataşehir district on the Asian side of Istanbul, Turkey.The complex consists of three towers, a residential tower (150 m), an office tower (150 m) and a main tower (280 m at roof level, 301 m including its twin spires), [1] a hotel, and one of the largest shopping centers in Turkey with a 16 screen cinema.
Istanbul became one of the world's most important Jewish centers in the 16th and 17th century. [214] Romaniote and Ashkenazi communities existed in Istanbul before the conquest of Istanbul, but it was the arrival of Sephardic Jews that ushered a period of cultural flourishing.