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Riverside Market opened on 28 September 2019. [1] [2] The market was founded by Mike Percasky, Kris Inglis and Richard Peebles, who modelled the design on food markets in Melbourne and Copenhagen. [3] They had previously had success with a similar location in Christchurch, called the Little High Eatery. [4]
With the purchase Progressives market share increased to around 45% of the NZ market. [13] In 2003, Progressive Enterprises closed its Auckland and Christchurch distribution centres and rehired the redundant workers. [14] Woolworths Limited of Australia purchased Progressive Enterprises from Foodland Associated Limited on 24 November 2005. [15]
The business eventually became Smith's City Market, or Smiths City. [3] The flagship Colombo Street store was still operating more than 100 years later, in 2020. [4] Smiths City opened its first store outside Christchurch, in Filleul Street, Dunedin, in 1977. [2] By March 2020, it had 29 stores. [3]
In 2014 the Christchurch breakfast, then presented by Si and Gary, became the new network breakfast show and continued to be presented from Christchurch. In April 2015 the networked breakfast was extended to Dunedin and Hawkes Bay with the local presenters in those markets moved to the local The Breeze station in their respective markets.
The Christchurch radio market is the second-largest in New Zealand, with 511,700 listeners aged 10 and over. The three largest stations in Christchurch by market share are Newstalk ZB, More FM, and The Breeze. [356] As with other New Zealand radio markets, most radio stations in Christchurch are centralcast out of Auckland.
Name Retail format Main products Number of stores Number of Auckland stores Parent company Founded Head office 2degrees: Electronics store [1]: Mobile phones [1]: 56 [1]: 20 [1] ...
Detail of Market Place on the map of Christchurch in 1862 by C. E. Fooks. Christchurch was surveyed by Joseph Thomas and Edward Jollie in March 1850, and on these earliest maps the area that became Victoria Square is marked as grassland. [10] On Black Map 273 the area straddling the river can already be seen marked as "Market Place". [11]
Almost all of the city's commercial heart lies within the approximately rectangular 9.8-square-kilometre (3.8 sq mi) area formed by the four avenues. The term "within the Four Avenues" is widely used in Christchurch to refer to the central city. [1] By extension, Christchurch as a whole is sometimes referred to [by whom?] as "The Four Avenues".