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If you prefer to browse away from the hustle and bustle of Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar, among the world’s largest with its 4,000-plus shops, head to Arasta instead.
Forum Istanbul Kocatepe Bayrampaşa: 176,380 [11] BO Dec MM IKEA; Galataport: 2021 Karaköy (Galata) Beyoğlu: 400,000 * [12] BE Cruise ship terminal 29,000 m 2; Painting and Sculpture museum 20,087 m 2 [13] Istanbul Modern art museum 10,500 m 2 [14] Peninsula hotel; Galleria Ataköy: 1987 Ataköy: Bakırköy: 77,906 [15] Grand Pera: 2016 ...
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.
The Guide originally launched in 2023, reviewing restaurants solely in the Turkish city of Istanbul. [1] In 2024, the Guide expanded to also review restaurants in the Turkish seaside regions of Bodrum and İzmir Province. [2] [3]
Taksim Square (Turkish: Taksim Meydanı, IPA: [ˈtaksim ˈmejdanɯ]), situated in Beyoğlu in the European part of Istanbul, Turkey, is a major tourist and leisure district famed for its restaurants, shops, and hotels. It is considered the heart of modern Istanbul, with the central station of the Istanbul Metro network.
Mahmutpasha Bazaar (Turkish: Mahmutpaşa Çarşısı) is a shopping street in Istanbul, Turkey. It is located in the area between Grand Bazaar and Eminönü in the Mahmutpaşa neighbourhood of Fatih district. This market area, with copious small shops on both sides of the main street, is a symbol of cheap shopping in Istanbul.
Trump Towers Istanbul are two conjoined skyscrapers in Şişli, Istanbul, Turkey. One of the towers is an office tower, and the other a residential tower, consisting of over 200 residences. [4] The complex also holds a shopping mall with some 80 shops and a multiplex cinema. They are the first Trump Towers built on the European continent. [2]
İstiklal Avenue once again became the center for fine arts and leisure in Istanbul and real estate prices skyrocketed. Numerous new art galleries, bookstores, cafés, pubs, restaurants, shops and hotels were opened in and around the street, and venues around it became the host to many international art festivals, such as the annual Istanbul ...