Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In March 2000, Tesco began planning to build a "£20 million shopping centre" in Dublin 17. Tesco was believed to have paid around £12 million for the 10-acre site. [ 2 ] By October, they had applied for planning permission to develop the shopping centre.
This page was last edited on 24 October 2024, at 11:38 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Mervyns shuttered all of its Georgia locations in 1997; the store at North DeKalb was replaced by an Uptons, which closed in 1999, then it became Burlington. Stein Mart was added in the early 1990s, replacing a portion of a mall wing which once housed a Spinnaker's restaurant, a Bonanza Steakhouse and smaller mall stores.
Tesco Ireland operates a number of Tesco Extra hypermarkets in Ireland, with Clarehall Extra on the Malahide Road being the first to open in 2006. Tesco's largest hypermarket store in Europe, with a floorspace of 18,500 m 2 (199,000 sq ft), opened in Dundalk in County Louth in November 2010.
Quinnsworth was a supermarket chain that operated in Ireland from 1966 to 1997. During its time in operation, it grew to be one of Ireland's leading retailers, with approximately one quarter of the grocery market in the Republic of Ireland, and some 88 supermarkets across the island of Ireland, including its Crazy Prices brand operated at some of its larger outlets.
Artaine Castle's anchor stores include Tesco and Penneys. Other retailers include a hairdressers, pharmacy, post office and a bookshop. [8] There are just under 85,000 square feet of space, 21 shops in total, and 539 parking spaces. [9]
Airside Retail Park (Irish: Páirc Miondíolaíochta Thaobh an Aerfoirt [1]) is a retail park that opened in 2001 in Swords, Dublin, close to Dublin Airport. An extension was built in 2005, which doubled the size of the park and included a new recycling centre. [2] As of October 2018, there were 30 shops and businesses based at the site. [3]
Tesco Ireland was one of seven shops fined for failing to display prices properly by the National Consumer Agency in July 2008. [15] Tesco Ireland decided in 2019 not to make home deliveries in Tallaght due to a anti-social behaviour incidents in the area. [16] [17] [18] Tesco apologised for selling anti-Jewish literature to customers in Ireland.