Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Falabella is a multinational chain of department stores owned by Chilean multinational company S.A.C.I. Falabella. It is the largest South American department store , [ 6 ] and a member of the International Association of department stores (since 2006).
Falabella S.A. is a Chilean multinational company.It is the largest retail company in Chile followed by Cencosud and one of the largest in Latin America. It operates its flagship Falabella department stores in addition to Mall Plaza shopping centers, Tottus hyper & supermarkets, Banco Falabella banks, and Sodimac home improvement centers.
Banco Falabella is a Chilean bank. Founded in 1998, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is headquartered in Las Condes , Chile. [ 2 ] It is a subsidiary of S.A.C.I. Falabella and has branches in Chile, Peru , and Colombia .
There are 11 locations in Chile, 4 in Peru (under the Mall Aventura Plaza brand until 2016), and 3 in Colombia. [2] They are large regional shopping malls anchored by multiple department stores and hypermarkets. [1] This includes the parent company's Falabella department stores and Tottus hypermarkets. [1]
Tottus (owned by Falabella) Unimarc (owned by SMU S.A.) Colombia. Alkosto (cash & carry) Almacenes la 14; Almacenes Éxito owned by Groupe Casino
Centro Mayor is a shopping mall located in the south of Bogotá, Colombia.It was inaugurated on March 26, 2010. The mall has 248,000 m 2 (2,667,000 sq ft) of built area, [1] being the biggest mall in Colombia and the second one in Latin America, behind the Centro Comercial Aricanduva, in São Paulo, Brazil.
Parque Arauco is the third largest Chilean shopping malls company, after Cencosud's malls division and Mall Plaza the S.A.C.I. Falabella shopping malls subsidiary. It is headquartered in Santiago. The company manages shopping malls in Chile, Peru and Colombia. It has 24 shopping malls with a total of GLA 672,700 square meters.
Falabella – largest and oldest department store in Chile; La Polar; Ripley; Abcdin; Defunct: J. C. Penney – two stores in Santiago area (one in Alto Las Condes as a full-store, one in Parque Arauco as an only-furniture store); closed because of poor sales in 1999; converted to Almacenes París and Casa&Ideas stores.