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The Myer Centre is a five-story shopping centre in the heart of the Adelaide city centre, South Australia. A significant landmark in Rundle Mall, it houses South Australia's largest Myer store alongside over 80 smaller shops and a large underground food court. [1] It is also accessible from North Terrace and an airbridge to David Jones.
The centre was built by Myer Shopping Centres as part of an extensive subdivision of the area, which at the time was the largest remaining underdeveloped, nonindustrial land in the Adelaide metropolitan area. The centre opened in September 1970. [1] Located in the City of Tea Tree Gully, it is the major shopping hub for the north-east of Adelaide.
Westfield Marion achieved major Australian firsts upon redevelopment in 1997 as the first shopping centre to have all three department stores present in South Australia at the time, (David Jones, Harris Scarfe and Myer) as well as all three discount department stores (Big W, Kmart and Target).
Rundle Mall is a pedestrian street mall located in Adelaide, South Australia.It was opened as a pedestrian mall in September 1976 after the closing of the western section of Rundle Street between King William Street and Pulteney Street, to vehicular traffic. [2]
Dazzeland was a two-storey family entertainment centre occupying the top levels of the REMM Myer Centre in Rundle Mall, a major shopping mall in Adelaide, Australia. [6] The centre was built between 1988 and 1991, at a cost of $1 billion.
The centre is the fourth biggest in Adelaide, behind Colonnades Shopping Centre, Westfield Tea Tree Plaza, and Westfield Marion. [citation needed] It originally opened on 17 November 1960 as "Elizabeth Town Centre" before reopening after a redevelopment on 14 November 1984. [1]
Myer Centre may refer to various shopping centres in Australia: Myer Centre, Adelaide; Uptown, Brisbane, formerly The Myer Centre This page was last edited on 12 ...
Sydney's Royal Arcade, since demolished. This arcade, one of the earliest examples of a shopping centre in Australia and one of many of its kind in Sydney's city centre, ran from George Street near the markets, through to Pitt Street.