Shopping Centre
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  • Mall owners up stakes in Liberty
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Two of the world's biggest shopping centre owners are building stakes in Liberty International, parent company of Capital Shopping Centres, and City observers believe Westfield and Simon Property Group could be jockeying for position ahead of a bid for the UK's number one owner of regional malls.

    (Page 1  : 243 words)
  • F&C sells Lion Walk
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    F&C Property has sold the Lion Walk shopping centre in Colchester, Essex to LaSalle Investment Management for £69m

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  • Warner commits to Waterside
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Warner Estate and Aylesbury Vale District Council have signed the formal development agreement for the mixed-use Waterside Shopping regeneration project in Aylesbury town centre.

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  • Houndshill opens at 93 per cent let
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Modus opened its newly-extended Houndshill shopping centre in Blackpool last month, tripling the size of the existing scheme to 398,000 sq ft.

    (Page 2  : 234 words)
  • A Wear moves into UK
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    A Wear, Ireland's top female fashion brand, has opened its first UK standalone store at Highcross Leicester, and it has already signed two more deals as part of a UK-wide acquisitions programme.

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  • Swords application goes in
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Joe O'Reilly's Chartered Land has lodged a planning application with Fingal County Council to expand its Swords Pavilions shopping centre. The E1bn investment will add over 100 small and large retail units, two flagship department stores for Marks & Spencer and House of Fraser, almost 200 residential units and four blocks of office space with associated car parking to the existing centre.

    (Page 2  : 145 words)
  • Arcadia heads for Livingston
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Arcadia Group has confirmed it is to open two double-store units at The Elements in Livingston, housing retailers Topshop, Topman, Dorothy Perkins and Burton. The Elements - Land Securities' new £130m shopping centre - will open its doors on 16 October this year.

    (Page 2  : 105 words)
  • Newbury scheme gets the go-ahead
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    In a contra-cyclical move Standard Life Investments and Shearer Property Group are to start construction this autumn on their £130m Parkway development in Newbury, Berkshire.

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  • Future proof
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    BCSC has updated its research on the importance of the retail property sector in the UK economy. The report highlights the shift in the nature of shopping places away from the out-of-town model towards town centre developments.

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  • On a high
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    September is proving to be a busy month for Hammerson. The developer, in partnership with Land Securities, is gearing up for the opening of Cabot Circus in Bristol on September 25, while only last week, in partnership with Hermes, it launched the long-awaited Highcross Leicester.

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  • viewpoint
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    We've not had much of a summer to speak of, so for once September doesn't seem too premature to start thinking about Christmas.

    (Page 6  : 275 words)
  • Food feedback
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    As ever we aim to bring you up to the minute news, and this month Food Feedback comes from Leicester. On 4 September 2008, Highcross opened and the Showcase Cinema De Lux also previewed its new offer to the city.

    (Page 6  : 259 words)
  • Design for life
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Designer nursery brand Mamas & Papas is one of very few retailers riding the waves of the current economic downturn. In fact the retailer is doing so well that it has announced the locations of a number of new stores in a major retail expansion programme.

    (Page 8  : 732 words)
  • A Welsh welcome
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    In recent years Cardiff's Docklands has seen a remarkable renaissance, bringing life back into an area that had seen decades of decline. Iconic new structures have helped place the Welsh capital on the international cultural map, and none is more prominent than the Wales Millennium Centre.

    (Page 10  : 1217 words)
  • Community Place
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    It's 10 months since Bride Hall and Warner Estate opened the £30m shopping centre Bouverie Place in Folkestone, and the 25-unit scheme has given a welcome boost to trading in the town centre.

    (Page 12  : 783 words)
  • Leading the way
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Wayfinding signage is vital to make a shopping centre safe and easy to navigate. Frustrated shoppers, who can't find their way out of the car park or struggle to locate the toilets, may decide not to return. Hence, getting it right is paramount.

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  • Shopper spotlight
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    During this period of economic belt-tightening, the shopping habits of consumers have become of keen interest to retailers and centre managers. Customer evaluation company Retail Eyes has turned the spotlight on consumer behaviour and the factors that influence people's decision to visit a shopping centre as opposed to frequenting the high street. Retail Eyes conducted its survey, completed by 3,298 respondents, between 1 and 3 August 2008.

    (Page 16  : 490 words)
  • Quality mark
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Shopping centres from London to Glasgow have been investing in refurbishing their car park facilities, at a time when many owners are investing in their current stock instead of developing or buying anything new.

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  • Driving custom
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    With consumer spending squeezed by increasing food and fuel bills and retail sales falling, shopping centres are having to work harder than ever to attract customers. Fuel consumption and car park charging are likely to be the key barriers stopping shoppers from visiting their usual retail centre as they are forced to tighten their belts and save a few pennies.

    (Page 20  : 2315 words)
  • Top notch
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Liverpool One is the largest regeneration project to open in Europe this year, so it may not come as a surprise that three car parks with a total of 3,000 spaces have been built to cater for the thousands of shoppers visiting the scheme every day.

    (Page 26  : 923 words)
  • Bid for success
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    With its distinctive black and red logo, Q-Park is a recognisable brand in many of the UK's city centres, including Glasgow, Belfast, Liverpool and Sheffield.

    (Page 28  : 784 words)
  • Logical thinking
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Putting cars in your car park may not sound like the most innovative idea - after all, isn't that what a car park is for? But when you add in branded stands, simulators, off-road experiences and motorbike rides, the picture changes.

    (Page 30  : 1392 words)
  • A celebration of Sceptre winners
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Shopping Centre Developer of the Year: Westfield

    (Page 32  : 412 words)
  • lettings
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    ? Amersham

    (Page 34  : 1365 words)
  • moves
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Integrated communication solutions provider ZENITEL has appointed ROB RENTENAAR as country manager at its headquarters in Brussels. He has occupied several sales and marketing management functions for 3COM Benelux and has been country manager Benelux since 2004.

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  • Highcross sets a city spinning
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Thousands of shoppers flocked to the highly-anticipated launch of Highcross Leicester last week when Hammerson and Hermes opened the 320,000-sq ft extension to the existing city centre scheme.

    (Page 39  : 244 words)
  • Braehead's tin man
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Six-year-old Hollie Campbell from Barrhead couldn't believe her eyes when she bumped into a giant sculpture made from recycled junk in the middle of the Braehead shopping centre near Glasgow.

    (Page 39  : 156 words)
  • Castlepoint saves for the air ambulance
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Castlepoint, Bournemouth's premier shopping park, held its family fun day held on Saturday 16 August to raise funds for the Dorset and Somerset Air Ambulance. Retailers and Castlepoint's own staff created challenges, competitions and stalls in the malls to support the shopping park's charity of the year.

    (Page 39  : 197 words)
  • Leith looks to the East
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    Ocean Terminal shopping centre in Leith hosted three Asian-themed art exhibitions as part of the Edinburgh Mela Festival last month. The top floor of the shopping centre was transformed into a gallery and one of the exhibitions, 'Soho Road to the Punjab' was a Scottish premiere. It tells the story, through a photographic showcase, of the emergence of contemporary bhangra music in the UK.

    (Page 39  : 103 words)
  • Chadfield gets on his bike
    Published:  30 September, 2008

    As Shopping Centre went to press Dave Chadfield, centre manager at Coopers Square in Burton-on-Trent, was battling the storms to cycle more than 300 miles in three days. His aim was to help raise money towards a £7,000 target to build the first Footprints Orphanage in the Shimba Hills, near Mombasa in Kenya.

    (Page 39  : 115 words)
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