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Still, Ala Moana Center architecture and layouts inspired its owner in 2004 to invest over US$1 billion in remodeling various other shopping centers across Canada and the United States, using Ala Moana Center as a template. As of 2018, Ala Moana is valued at nearly $6 billion and is the largest outdoor mall in the world. [12]
Ala Moana is a major transfer point in Honolulu's bus system. Across the street from Ala Moana Center is Ala Moana Beach Park, dedicated by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1930s. The civic center of Ala Moana is Ala Moana Center, once the largest shopping center in the United States and currently the largest open-air shopping center in ...
This is a list of shopping malls in the United States and its territories that have at least 2,000,000 total square feet of retail space (gross leasable area).The list is based on the latest self-reported figures from the mall management websites, which are also reported on each mall's individual wiki page.
Ala Moana Center, 1960. This 1960 photo shows the Ala Moana Center, an open-air shopping mall in Honolulu, Hawaii. Today, it has more than 350 stores, restaurants, and services over 4 floors.
Pages in category "Shopping malls in Hawaii" ... Ala Moana Center; Aloha Tower Marketplace; F. Fairway Shops; I. International Market Place; K. Kahala Mall ...
On October 29, 1959, the first branch of Shirokiya outside Japan opened in Hawaii's then brand-new Ala Moana Center. In 1966 the department store moved to a different location in Ala Moana across from Liberty House (now Macy's) where it would remain for 50 years. A branch store was opened in Maui in November 1973.
La Ronde (atop the Ala Moana Office Building) La Ronde (atop in center of image) La Ronde was a restaurant [1] in Honolulu, [2] Hawaii.Built in 1961 [3] and designed by John Graham, [4] it was the first revolving restaurant in the United States [5] (preceding the "Eye of the Needle" restaurant in Seattle) and the third [6] [7] of its kind (after [8] [9] the Florian Tower and the Cairo Tower ...
Critics at the time regarded the shopping center as a potential failure due to its layout and design, which oriented the mall away from the Pacific Ocean. [1] Graham, the Ala Moana Center's chief designer, also designed the building with two levels for retail stores and parking, an unusual layout in the 1950s. [1]