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  2. List of cinemas in Metro Manila - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cinemas_in_Metro...

    Glorietta 4: 6: Glorietta 4, Ayala Center Makati: Cinemas 1 and 2: Dolby Atmos Cinemas 4 to 7: DTS. Cinema 3 is under renovation, A-Giant Screen opening soon Greenbelt 1: 2: Greenbelt 1 Ayala Center Makati: Cinema 1: Dolby Digital Cinema 2: SDDS Permanently closed as part of redevelopment Greenbelt 3: 5: Greenbelt 3 Ayala Center Makati: Cinemas ...

  3. Glorietta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glorietta

    Glorietta, located in Ayala Center, has a GLA of 250,000 m 2 (2,700,000 sq ft), making it the ninth largest shopping mall in the Philippines in terms of GLA, tied with Greenbelt. It is divided into five sections: the contiguous Glorietta 1, 2, 3, and 4, and the fully detached Glorietta 5. Glorietta 1 to 4 features up to five levels of retail.

  4. Makati Central Business District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makati_Central_Business...

    The development originally started with a number of separate shopping arcades and Greenbelt Park before expanding to cover over 50 hectares (120 acres). Glorietta and Greenbelt shopping malls are located within the complex, as well as the One Ayala complex. This lifestyle hub is the Philippines's shopping mecca, and is serviced by upscale ...

  5. Telephone numbers in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_the...

    The Philippines is assigned an international dialing code of +63 by ITU-T. Telephone numbers are fixed at eight digits for area code 02 , and seven digits for area codes from 03X to 09X , with area codes fixed at one, two, or three digits (a six-digit system was used until the mid-1990s; four to five digits were used in the countryside).

  6. Ayala Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayala_Center

    The 2007 Glorietta explosion ripped through the Glorietta 2 section of the Glorietta shopping complex at Ayala Center in Makati on October 19, 2007, killing 11 people and injuring 120. Despite conflicting reports, it was concluded that the explosion was caused by a faulty liquefied petroleum gas tank in a Chinese restaurant.

  7. Alabang Town Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alabang_Town_Center

    Alabang Town Center opened in 1982 as a strip mall with a supermarket and two cinemas that had the St. Jerome Emiliani and Sta. Susana Parish, a Roman Catholic church which was built in the 1970s, as its anchor tenant. The mall was expanded in 1994 and 2007 and became a cosmopolitan Mediterranean-designed, airy lifestyle center.

  8. Greenbelt (Ayala Center) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenbelt_(Ayala_Center)

    Greenbelt, located in Ayala Center, has a gross leasable area (GLA) of 250,000 m 2 (2,700,000 sq ft), making it the ninth largest shopping mall in the Philippines in terms of GLA, tied with Glorietta. Its lot is bounded by Legazpi Street, Dela Rosa Street, Makati Avenue, Esperanza Street, and Paseo de Roxas.

  9. Ayala Malls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayala_Malls

    Ayala Malls Solenad (opened in 2009; launched as an Ayala Mall in 2015) [6] — Nuvali Boulevard, Nuvali, Santa Rosa, Laguna; Ayala Malls Legazpi (opened in 2016) [7] — Legazpi, Albay; South Park Center (opened in 2016) [8] — Alabang, Muntinlupa, Metro Manila; Ayala Malls The 30th (opened in 2017) — Ortigas Center, Pasig, Metro Manila