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Name Stores First store in Serbia Parent; P.S. Fashion: 64 [23]: 2006: P.S. Fashion: Extreme Intimo [Wikidata]: 60 [24]: 1992 Extreme Intimo Legend: 48 [25]: 1998 ...
Delhaize Serbia (full legal name: Delhaize Serbia d.o.o. Beograd) or Delhaize Maxi, is a Serbian supermarket chain owned by Ahold Delhaize, with headquarters in Belgrade. Founded in 2000, the chain has around 482 stores in Serbia. [ 4 ]
The company Tropic Group from Banja Luka bought the 39 Tempo and Maxi supermarkets from Delhaize. [1] The Tempo store in Ada was the first store to be renamed Mega Maxi, followed by those in Niš, Čačak and Kragujevac. The remaining stores were renamed in 2023. [2] In December 2021, Tempo store in Novi Sad caught fire.
In the past C-market was the biggest retail chain in Serbia, today it's part of Maxi. All of the C-market stores were rebranded into "Maxi" or "Mini Maxi" after the chain was sold to Delta Holding . C-market was a first company operating a supermarket chain in Serbia (part of Yugoslavia then).
Delta Holding is a Serbian holding company with the headquarters in Belgrade.It has interests in a variety of industries, such as agribusiness, real estate and wholesale.It employs around 3,600 people, making it one of the largest non-government employers in Serbia. [4]
The shopping centre covers the area of over 32,000 m 2 (340,000 sq ft) on the ground and two more floors. There are nearly five hundred shops, many galleries, in-doors squares, passages, drives and stairs, all of them forming a modern ensemble.
Maxi, by Maxi Priest; Maxi, a German women's magazine; MAXI (ISS Experiment), an X-ray monitoring device aboard the International Space Station; Austin Maxi, a 1970s medium-sized 5-door hatchback car produced by British Leyland; Maxi dress, an ankle-length dress; Maxi language, which is a spoken in Benin (also known as Fon)
Niš was known as Нишь [10] or Ньшь [11] (Nyšь) in Old Serbian and Old Bulgarian. Nāissus is the Ancient name of the city. [12] Naissus is itself probably a derivative of the older *Nāviskos, from *Nāvia ("trough valley"), the Celtic name of the Nišava River, which flows through the city.