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Taipei City Mall (Chinese: 台北地下街; pinyin: Táiběi Dìxiàjiē) is a shopping center located at the intersection of the Datong and Zhongzheng districts in Taipei, Taiwan. It is the first underground market in Taipei City.
This page was last edited on 9 December 2024, at 12:26 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
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 ...
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 ...
Pages in category "Shopping malls in Taipei" The following 32 pages are in this category, out of 32 total. ... Taipei 101; Taipei City Mall; X. Ximen Metro Mall; Z.
In 2010, the Taipei municipal government sought bids to build a new mall on the parking lots around Guang Hua Plaza. [5] The city announced that the building should be located at the intersection of Civic Boulevard and Jinshan South Road, have a total of 21 floors (15 aboveground, six below); and occupy a total floor space of 2678 ping, or 8,850 square metres (95,300 sq ft).
In October 1991, Taiwan's first self-created clothing brand NET was established in Housewives Mall. [4] In 1993, Housewives Mall opened its first flagship store on Nanjing East Road, Taipei City. In 1996, the Housewife Shopping Mall was renamed Jia Fang Clothing Co., Ltd. (J-fun Corp.).
When it first opened, the mall was open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. [2] Before Core Pacific opened in 2001, its management had been fined by the Taipei city government for failing fire safety inspections. Further fines were levied when the mall opened to the public without actually first obtaining an operating license. [3]