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Taipei 101; BELLAVITA; FEDS Xinyi A13; Neo19; Eslite Xinyi Flagship Store; ... Station Front Metro Mall; Taipei City Mall; Ximen Metro Mall; Zhongshan Metro Mall ...
Taipei 101 (Chinese: 台北101; pinyin: Táiběi 101; stylized in all caps), [1] formerly known as the Taipei World Financial Center, is a 508.0 m (1,667 ft), 101 story skyscraper in Taipei, Taiwan. It is owned by Taipei Financial Center Corporation .
Taipei, Taiwan is known for its large number and variety of shopping streets, markets and malls and has been known to tourists as one of the main "shopping city" in Eastern Asia along with Hong Kong, Seoul, Tokyo, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. Shopping venues in the city include department stores, malls, underground transit malls, night markets ...
Shin Kong Mitsukoshi Taipei Tianmu (2004) Shin Kong Mitsukoshi Xinyi Place - A4, A8, A9, A11 (1997) Shin Shin Department Store (1972) Station Front Metro Mall (2004) Syntrend Creative Park (2015) Taipei 101 Mall (2004) Taipei City Mall (2000) TM Midtown (2017) [5] Urban One (2010) [6] Vieshow Cinemas Xinyi (1998) Ximen Metro Mall (2002 ...
Xinyi District Skyline with Taipei 101 on the right. Xinyi District night view Xinyi District from Xiangshan. Taipei 101; At 508.2 m (1,667 ft) tall, Taipei 101 was the tallest building in the World from 2004 to 2010 and is still currently Asia's 6th tallest building and the ninth tallest building in the world, as of November 2018. Visitors can ...
Taipei 101/World Trade Center (Chinese: 台北101/世貿; pinyin: Táiběi Yīlíngyī/Shìmào) is a metro station in Taipei, Taiwan served by Taipei Metro. Near this station are Taipei 101, Taipei World Trade Center and Taipei International Convention Center. It is part of the city center of the capital Taipei. [3] The station number is R03.
The building of the mall was designed by Chu-Yuan Lee and construction began in December 1978. [3] The mall officially opened in January 1983 and was named Asiaworld Shopping Mall. In January 2010, the mall was renamed to Momo Mall. [4] On September 1, 2013, the mall was renamed again to Breeze Nan Jing, and was operated by Breeze Center. [5]
The opening of Taipei 101's mall in 2003 was expected to affect the revenues of Core Pacific's tenants, although less severely than at other malls due to Core Pacific's lower price points. [5] In 2004, the mall's management company was cited by Taiwan's Fair Trade Commission for unfair trade practices relating to a gift certificate promotion ...