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This is a list of shopping centres in Ireland, which includes notable shopping complexes listed by county. Cork Mahon ...
In Germany, shopping days and opening hours were previously regulated by a federal law called the "Shop Closing Law" (Ladenschlussgesetz), first enacted in 1956 and last revised on 13 March 2003. On 7 July 2006, however, the federal government handed over the authority to regulate shopping hours to the sixteen states ( Länder ).
The result was the reverse-engineering of a 1970s shopping complex into a centre similar to modern developments elsewhere in Ireland. The shopping centre for now remains the largest shopping centre in Limerick after further expansion of the Dooradoyle mall in 2005. A playground was planned on the grounds of the centre in 2013. [1]
Dundrum Town Centre is a shopping centre located in Dundrum, Dublin, Ireland.It is one of Ireland's two largest [1] shopping centres with over 131 shops, 47 restaurants, 3 amusement facilities and a cinema, retail floor space of 111,484 m 2 (1,200,000 sq ft) [1] and almost 140,000 m 2 (1,500,000 sq ft) total floor space, [2] and over 3,000 car parking spaces. [3]
The centre is notable in that, as the first major shopping centre opened during the economic boom of the late-1990s, it marked the first appearance of many British retailers on main streets in Ireland. These included: Boots, Dixons, Debenhams, Next, and Argos among others, some of which have gone on to become major names in Ireland.
The centre has experienced shoppers from the Republic of Ireland, who cross the border to Newry to buy cheaper goods due to difference in currency. This remarkable increase in cross-border trade has become so widespread that it has lent its name to a general phenomenon known as the Newry effect.
The Big Lots at 85 Tunnel Road, in the Innsbruck Mall, will be closing in January 2024. The Innsbruck Mall, at 85 Tunnel Road, is owned by Sky King Inc., a subsidiary company of Ingles Markets LLC.
In June 1999 the development was again sold for £22m to a consortium of private UK-based Investors, the sale of the centre was handled by Paddy Brennan, investment director with Lambert Smith Hampton [4] On 16 January 2001 Dunnes Stores announced they would be closing their branch in the Richmond Centre despite this the company stated that the ...