Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Still, Ala Moana Center architecture and layouts inspired its owner in 2004 to invest over US$1 billion in remodeling various other shopping centers across Canada and the United States, using Ala Moana Center as a template. As of 2018, Ala Moana is valued at nearly $6 billion and is the largest outdoor mall in the world.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Pearlridge Center is the second largest shopping center in Hawaiʻi, after Ala Moana, and is Hawaiʻi's largest enclosed shopping center, located in ʻAiea.Opened in 1972 and expanded in 1976, the enclosed mall is split into three "phases" (Uptown, Downtown, and Phase Three) and overlooks historic Pearl Harbor and the USS Arizona Memorial.
Tripler Army Medical Center viewed from Moanalua Gardens at sunset Moanalua is a valley, a stream, an ahupuaʻa , and a residential neighborhood in Honolulu , Hawaiʻi . The valley extends inland from behind Āliapaʻakai crater ( Salt Lake ) to the crest of the Koʻolau Range .
WikiProject Shopping Centers, formerly WikiProject Dead Malls, is a project to better organize information in articles related to shopping centers.This page and its subpages contain their suggestions; it is hoped that this project will help to focus the efforts of other Wikipedians.
Salt Lake's growth was mainly attributed to the ease (in those days) with which residents could travel to and from downtown Honolulu and Waikīkī, where many worked.Salt Lake's main street is Salt Lake Boulevard, running the length of the community, from Moanalua High School to Aloha Stadium, connecting Puuloa Road (Hawaii Route 66) and Kamehameha Highway (Hawaii Route 99).
Travels between Kalihi Transit Center and Aikahi Park Shopping Center via Kalihi Street and Likelike Highway. Interlines with Route 66 (to continue to Kailua Town and Downtown Honolulu.) Kalihi, Kalihi Valley, Windward City Shopping Center, Windward Community College, Windward Mall, Aikahi Park Shopping Center 4:30AM–10:40PM 4:45AM–10:30AM
Occasionally, outrigger canoes were displayed at the Hawaii Maritime Center as well. The museum closed May 1, 2009 due to lack of revenue. [3] Hawaii Pacific University partnered with a developer to own the Marketplace in 2011, and a few years later in 2013, they bought out the developer and took complete control of the facility. [4]