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This is a list of notable shopping centres in South Africa with the aim of including all (and only) shopping centres with at least two anchor stores such as hypermarkets, supermarkets, department stores, or multicinemas, or which are otherwise notable.
Pages in category "Shopping centres in Pretoria" ... Brooklyn Mall; M. Menlyn Park This page was last edited on 29 May 2023, at 19:28 (UTC). ...
Brooklyn Mall is a shopping mall in Brooklyn, Pretoria, South Africa, owned by development company Growthpoint Properties. [1] Brooklyn is designed around two spaces – the Mall itself, hosting the retail area, and Brooklyn Square, an outside dining area.
Both Moot and Pretoria West are listed separately below. The City of Tshwane is the second largest municipality in Gauteng and is among the six biggest metropolitan municipalities in South Africa. The following towns and townships form part of the Municipality's area: Pretoria, Centurion, Akasia, Soshanguve, Mabopane, Atteridgeville, Ga-Rankuwa ...
Menlyn Park Shopping Centre is a large shopping mall in Menlyn, Pretoria, South Africa, owned by development company Pareto. [1] It is designed around three spaces – the Food Court, the keyhole malls and focal points, and a large internal garden square surrounded by restaurants.
The M11 route begins in the southern part of the Pretoria CBD, at a junction with the R101 route (Kgosi Mampuru Street; Sophie De Bruyn Street). It begins by heading eastwards, meeting the M18 route (Bosman Street; Thabo Sehume Street) and becoming two one-way streets (Jeff Masemola Street, formerly Jacob Mare Street, [5] eastwards from the M18 and Scheiding Street westwards to the M18).
The Ecole Miriam Makeba, a campus of the Lycée Jules Verne French international school, is in Arcadia. [4] The University of Pretoria is also near Arcadia. High schools in the area include Pretoria High School for Girls, Pretoria Boys High School, Afrikaanse Hoër Meisieskool, Afrikaanse Hoër Seunskool and Pretoria Technical High School.
This was later followed by the Rissik Station Stores and the multi-storey Hatfield Galleries on Burnett Street. Since the late 1980s, the character of Hatfield has changed rapidly as more and more businesses have been established in the area and today it is a mixed-use neighborhood with only 18% of the surface area still residential in nature.