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Intu Properties plc was a British real estate investment trust (REIT), largely focused on shopping centre management and development. Originally named Transatlantic Insurance Holdings plc and later Liberty International plc, it changed its name in May 2010 to Capital Shopping Centres Group plc after demerging its Capital & Counties Properties business unit to form an independent business.
The transfer from Intu to Intu SGS is expected to take place by the end of 2020, and will involve Global Mutual becoming asset manager of the centres and Savills serving as property manager. [23] In 2020, it was reported that Braehead Shopping Centre was trialling the use of full-body security scanners at the entrance. [24]
Capital Shopping Centres was renamed Intu in 2013 and spent £7 million rebranding the "Intu Trafford Centre". [30] As of 2017, Intu claimed a fair market value of £2.312 billion for the centre. [31] However, the firm entered administration in June 2020 and the centre was placed into receivership by its creditors in November 2020. [32]
The Braehead Arena is a multi-purpose arena in Renfrewshire, Scotland. The arena was built in 1996, and is located within the Braehead Complex. The arena was formerly the home of the Scottish Eagles ice hockey club and is now the home to the expansion Glasgow Clan ice hockey team of the Elite Ice Hockey League .
The term buffet originally referred to the French sideboard furniture where the food was placed, but eventually became applied to the serving format. At balls, the "buffet" was also where drinks were obtained, either by circulating footmen supplying orders from guests, but often by the male guests. During the Victorian period, it became usual ...
Derbion (formerly Intu Derby, Westfield Derby and the Eagle Centre) [1] [2] is a large indoor shopping centre in Derby, England. It is the largest shopping centre in the East Midlands and the 15th largest in the United Kingdom .
Braehead farm is located to the south of Banchory, Aberdeenshire, in the rural community of Auchattie. [13] [14] The farm was part of the wider Banchory Lodge estate until 1950 when it was sold to Col. Reginald Pepys De Winton [2] as part of the smaller Riverstone estate. Braehead farm itself was separated and sold to Permanent Homes in 1980. [15]
[176] [177] In 2019, The Guardian reported that TikTok had censored videos of topics not favored by the Chinese government. [176] That year, TikTok took down a video about human rights abuses in the Xinjiang internment camps against Uyghurs but restored it after 50 minutes as well as the creator's account, saying that the action was a mistake ...