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Agria Park, Eger (2008) Alba Plaza, Székesfehérvár (1999) Alba üzletház, Salgótarján (1999) Balaton Plaza, Veszprém (2004) Csaba Center, Békéscsaba (2001) Debrecen Fórum, Debrecen (2008)
The Westend Shopping Center is a shopping centre built by Hungarian TriGránit Ltd. located next to the Western Railway Station, in Budapest, Hungary.Opened on 12 November 1999, it is known for having been the largest mall in Central Europe until larger ones were inaugurated, including Arena Plaza, also in Pest.
New York Department Stores - department store chain, founded in 1931, acquired in 1994 by the Melville Corp., most stores turned to Marshalls or closed. Pitusa - discount department store chain, founded in 1976, downsized due to economic problems and ultimately closed last stores in 2014 after bankruptcy.
Arena Mall (formerly known as Aréna Plaza) is the largest shopping plaza in Budapest at a size of 200,000 m 2 (2,200,000 sq ft). On November 15, 2007, Arena Plaza opened at the site of an old horse racing track. [1] The project was developed by Plaza Centers Group, a shopping center developer in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE).
Váci utca is one of the main shopping streets in Budapest. Among the retailers located here are: Zara, H&M, Mango, ESPRIT, Douglas AG, Swarovski, Hugo Boss, Lacoste and Nike. The street opens to Vörösmarty Square. The street is known for clip joints. Some of these pretend to be strip clubs, but others present themselves as ordinary bars.
CBA is a Hungarian supermarket chain with almost 5,200 stores. It operates in Bulgaria, Lithuania, Czech Republic, Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Serbia and Slovakia. [1] There were 134 stores in Hungary in February 2018. Most CBA stores have grill bars, bakeries, butcher's and wine shops.
It is also one of Budapest's main shopping streets, with fine cafes, restaurants, theatres, embassies and luxury boutiques. [1] Among the most noticeable buildings are the State Opera House, the former Ballet School (under reconstruction for several years), the Zoltán Kodály Memorial Museum and Archives, the Hungarian University of Fine Arts ...
The department store is located on Calle Real and is also claimed to be the first to introduce the "fixed price" policy in merchandising in the country and was known to be "the store that sold everything from needle to anchor." It offered groceries, hardware, stationery, toys, watches, jewelry, machinery, buttons, threads etc. [142]