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Lithuania has around 34 shopping malls with more than 10,000 m 2 (110,000 sq ft) square meters of space. Another two are under construction. At the end of 2018, the total retail space in shopping centres larger than 5,000 square metres (54,000 sq ft) of gross leasable area and with more than 10 tenants amounted to approximately 1,100,000 square metres (12,000,000 sq ft).
Akropolis is the largest shopping mall in the Baltics by floor area, a shopping center and entertainment center in Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital. It was built in Šeškinė by Akropolis Group in 2002 and opened in April 2002 (at that time the area was 54,000 square meters). The bank "Hansa-LTB" financed the construction.
Three stores with different names were opened in Vilnius in 1992. First Maxima store was opened in 1998. [8] At the end of 2011, Maxima Group bought the Aldik supermarket chain in Poland with 24 stores. [9] Between 2012 and 2020, Maxima also operated a division in Spain, under the names SuperSol (supermarkets) and Cash Diplo (Cash & Carry). [10]
The Central Business District (abbreviated Vilnius CBD) is a rapidly developing business district in Šnipiškės eldership of Vilnius, Lithuania. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 8 ] It is Lithuania's most important business district and the largest of its kind in the Baltic States .
Rimi Baltic is a major retail operator in the Baltic states based in Riga, Latvia.It is a subsidiary of Swedish group ICA.Rimi Baltic operates 314 retail stores in Estonia (84 stores), Latvia (141 stores) and Lithuania (89 stores) and has distribution centres in each country.
The first store was opened in 1992 in Vilnius, Lithuania. [3] In 2005, Palink opened its first store in Riga, Latvia. In 2014, Palink sold all IKI stores in Latvia (51 stores) to local company Mego, stating that Palink is not interested in investing in Latvia anymore. IKI was 5th largest supermarket chain in Latvia. [4] [5]
Šnipiškės is a neighborhood in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. [1] Vilnius Central Business District is a part of Šnipiškės. [2] Located on the north bank of the river Neris, it became the site of a modern business district with skyscrapers which, however, mix with some historical wooden architecture.
Gediminas Avenue as seen from the Cathedral Square. Gediminas Avenue (Lithuanian: Gedimino prospektas) is the main street of Vilnius, where most of the governmental institutions of Lithuania are concentrated, including the government, parliament, Constitutional Court and ministries.