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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.
Fashion Outlets of Chicago is a shopping mall located in Rosemont, Illinois, United States. Located within the Chicago metropolitan area , the mall lies east of Interstate 294 and O'Hare International Airport and is adjacent to Rosemont Theatre .
Laforet Harajuku (ラフォーレ原宿, Rafōre Harajuku) is a department store, residence, and museum complex [1] located in the Harajuku commercial and entertainment district of the Shibuya neighborhood, in Tokyo, Japan. Constructed over part of the old Tokyo Central Church, a newer church located behind the store, [2] Laforet was opened in ...
HEP HEP Five HEP Navio The Ferris wheel atop HEP Five. HEP is a major shopping mall and entertainment center in the Umeda commercial district of Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan.It is a shopping mall consisting of a HEP Five and HEP Navio.
J-beauty has dominated the industry for some time, especially in the makeup categories. Shop the six best Japanese makeup brands ELLE editors and reviewers love.
In Minami, Takashimaya expanded from 56,000 to 78,000 m 2, and in Abeno, Kintetsu grew from 48,000 to a whopping 100,000 m 2, [2] making it the largest department store in Japan. [3] The resulting market saturation led West JR–Isetan to close in 2015, less than 4 years after opening; two-thirds of the space was converted to midsize shops and ...
The Japan Center is a shopping center in the Japantown neighborhood of San Francisco, California. It opened in March 1968 and was originally called the Japanese Cultural and Trade Center. [1] It is bounded by Geary (on the south), Post (on the north), Fillmore (on the west), and Laguna (on the east). The mall itself is composed of three mall ...
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 .