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  2. Big W (United Kingdom) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_W_(United_Kingdom)

    Big W (later named Woolworths Big W) was a British retail chain owned by the Kingfisher Group (later Woolworths Group PLC) in the United Kingdom, which operated between 1998 and 2004. Big W stores were large format out-of-town megastores that featured products from all of Kingfisher's main retail chains at the time, consisting of Comet , B&Q ...

  3. Westfield Tuggerah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westfield_Tuggerah

    Westfield Tuggerah is part of the $2.8 billion Tuggerah Town Centre masterplan to develop Tuggerah as a lifestyle hub. The masterplan proposes a combination of uses for the 70 hectares of land including new community facilities, large green spaces and parklands and the creation of active transport connections to a redeveloped transport ...

  4. Grand Central, Birmingham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Central,_Birmingham

    Grand Central (formerly The Pallasades Shopping Centre, previously Birmingham Shopping Centre) is a shopping centre located above New Street railway station in Birmingham, England, that opened in 1971 as Birmingham Shopping Centre. In 1989, it was largely refurbished and reopened on 17 September 1990 as The Pallasades Shopping Centre.

  5. Big W (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_W_(disambiguation)

    Big W, an Australian chain of discount stores owned by Woolworths Limited (an Australian company) Big W, a now-defunct British chain of large-format stores owned by Woolworths Group (a British company) It may also refer to: the "big W", a significant location in the film It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World; The logo used for Warner Communications

  6. Big W - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_W

    Big W (stylised as BIG W) is an Australian chain of discount department stores, which was founded in regional New South Wales in 1964. The company is a division of the Woolworths Group and as of 2024 operated 179 stores, [1] with around 18,000 employees across mainland Australia and Tasmania. Big W stocks clothing, health and beauty, garden ...

  7. David Jones (retailer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Jones_(retailer)

    David Jones acquired and then converted the Big W Department Stores at Kotara Fair and the two-storey Big W at Warrawong in 1971. The Warrawong store closed in February 1986. A store in Wagga Wagga was added due to the purchase of David Copland and Co in 1953 (closed 1971).

  8. Birmingham city centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birmingham_City_Centre

    Birmingham city centre, also known as Central Birmingham, is the central business district of Birmingham, England. The area was historically in Warwickshire . Following the removal of the Inner Ring Road , the city centre is now defined as being the area within the Middle Ring Road . [ 1 ]

  9. Birmingham Wholesale Markets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birmingham_Wholesale_Markets

    Enrolment of the charters of 1166 and 1189 granting and confirming Birmingham's right to hold a market. Birmingham's wholesale food markets date from 1166, when the Lord of the Manor Peter de Birmingham obtained a royal charter permitting him to hold a market at "his castle at Birmingham", though later members of the de Birmingham family claimed that markets in Birmingham had been held since ...