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UA Times Square, at Times Square; opened in December 1993, closed in February 2012; [16] the site was replaced by a Louis Vuitton store, and the UA theater was relocated to the 12th to 14th floor of the mall, renamed as CINE TIMES, [17] [18] opened in November 2013. [19] Closed in March 2021, it was succeeded by Emperor Cinemas.
Times Square is considered the first of its kind, the first "vertical mall" in Hong Kong. [7] Due to the high land price in Hong Kong, and the higher yield on retail property, Times Square departs from the common western model of the flat shopping mall. [7] The space allocated to retail is configured over 9 storeys.
Cinemas in Hong Kong were ordered to close doors three times in 2020. The Hong Kong Theater Association, which represents local cinema operators, said together with the third period of closure ...
Hong Kong has shuttered its cinemas again, for a period of two weeks beginning today. This comes as the government instituted new restrictions amid a rising wave of Covid-19 infections which is ...
Last week, Orange Sky Golden Harvest, a Hong Kong stock market firm which operates cinemas in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore issued a profit warning. It forecast that it would report losses of at ...
The Elements has a total of 123 shops as of 2008, along with an ice rink and the 1,600-seat Premiere Cinema (formerly The Grand Cinema), currently the largest cinema complex in Hong Kong. [2] The mall has ten washrooms, outside which there is a lobby with sitting area and magazine rack.
The cinema was regarded as one of the most extravagant in Hong Kong; whereas normal prime seats would cost 10 Hong Kong dollars (HKD), the cheapest seat in Palace Theatre costs 12 HKD. The 1060 larger and wider seats, the luxurious lobby, and the middle to upper class clientele signaled the birth of high-end cinemas for Hong Kong movie-goers.
Atrium of Maritime Square Aquatic Fantaria inside the mall. Maritime Square is a four-storey shopping centre located on Tsing Yi Island in Hong Kong. It was built and is owned by MTR Corporation (MTRC) in conjunction with the opening of Tsing Yi station.