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An aerial view of the mall (left) in 2014. Fashion Outlets of Chicago has a gross leasable area of 530,000 sq ft (49,000 m 2). [5] With two levels, the mall features touches of granite, marble and other high-end stones throughout the mall. Unlike most outlet malls, the mall is one of few to be an enclosed mall and is also climate controlled. [6]
The Gotemba Premium Outlets (Japanese: 御殿場プレミアム・アウトレット, Hepburn: Gotemba Puremiamu Autoretto) is an outlet mall located in Gotemba, Shizuoka, Japan, near Mount Fuji. It was opened on July 13, 2000, and contains over 200 stores.
Norgate Shopping Centre (first shopping mall built in Canada, a strip mall) [34] Place Vertu [35] Saint-Leonard. Le Boulevard Shopping Centre [36] (partly in Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension) Carrefour Langelier; Place Michelet [37] Place Provencher [38] Place Viau [39] Verdun. Le Campanîle & Place du Commerce [40] Ville-Marie, Montreal
The Donald E. Stephens Convention Center, formerly known as the Rosemont/O'Hare Exposition Center, is a convention center located in Rosemont, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. Built in 1975, the center has exhibition space of 840,000 sq ft (78,000 m 2 ) and parking available via a Skybridge connected parking garage, which is able to accommodate ...
A joint venture between Shinsaegae, A Korean department store company and Simon Properties. There are 4 Simon premium outlets in ROK with the first and main outlet in Yeoju. Busan Premium Outlets [1] Jeju Premium Center; Paju Premium Outlets [1] Siheung Premium Outlets [1] Starfield Anseong; Starfield Hanam; Yeoju Premium Outlets [1]
Fashion Outlets of Chicago – Rosemont (2013–present) Ford City Mall – Chicago (1965–present) Fox Valley Mall – Aurora (1975–present) Golf Mill Shopping Center – Niles (1960–present) Gurnee Mills – Gurnee (1991–present) Harlem Irving Plaza – Norridge (1956–present) Hawthorn Mall – Vernon Hills (1973–present)
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Tokyu intended the store to compete with Seibu Department Stores, which was making inroads into the Shibuya area. [1] The name of the building, 109, is a form of word play (goroawase, specifically numerical substitution) and is taken from the Japanese characters tō (meaning 10) and kyū (9) as in Tōkyū. The numbers 10 and 9 also signified ...