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This is a list of shopping malls in Singapore, sorted along their districts. As of August 2020, there are 171 malls on this list. As of August 2020, there are 171 malls on this list. Some listed shopping malls here are also inclusive as a mixed-use development and or part of an neighbourhood plaza.
It is now owned by Wharf Estates Singapore, formerly "Wheelock Properties (Singapore)", [2] a division of Hong Kong's Wheelock and Co. The mall has an underpass to Shaw House and ION Orchard. [3] It was the site of Borders' flagship Singapore store until its closure in 2011. [4] Following which, Marks & Spencer became Wheelock Place's main ...
Sembawang Shopping Centre was developed by CapitaLand Mall Trust on a freehold land.It consists of four retail stories (including one basement).It has a total floor area of 197,676 square feet (18,364.7 m 2), of which 134,534.99 square feet (12,498.710 m 2) are used for commercial purposes.
Yaohan's supermarket at Basement 1 and department store at the ground floor opened in October 1974. Yaohan department store, located at Basement 2, opened on 1 November 1974 by then-chairman of Singapore Tourist Promotion Board Runme Shaw. At opening time, Yaohan's supermarket section had 16 checkout counters while its department store section ...
Katong Shopping Centre (Chinese: 加东购物中心) is a shopping centre located along Mountbatten Road in Singapore.Established in 1971 and opened to the public in 1973, it was the first air-conditioned mall in Singapore.
White Sands was developed by OCBC Properties Pte Ltd and was the first major mall to be opened in Pasir Ris in December 1996. Like a typical suburban mall at the time, it had an Eng Wah cinema, Singapore's first Timezone arcade (the largest arcade in Singapore as of that point), a food court, a John Little department store, a Courts store, a Popular bookstore, a post office, a NTUC FairPrice ...
VivoCity was built on the site of the Expo Gateway and Harbour Pavilion exhibition halls of the former World Trade Centre (now the HarbourFront Centre) in June 2003.Since its opening in 2006, it is currently the largest shopping mall in Singapore, spanning 1,500,000 square feet (140,000 m 2) of gross floor area and 1,077,000 square feet (100,100 m 2) of retail space, larger than Suntec City ...
Parco Bugis Junction's anchor tenant was Seiyu's first department store in Singapore. The shopping mall initially comprised a cineplex by United Artists, a food court, and 112 specialty shops. [2] The cinema was taken over by Shaw Theatres in late 2001, after Shaw bought out United Artists' operations in Singapore.