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Wilton Shopping Centre car park. Wilton Shopping Centre, located in the Wilton area of Cork, is the second biggest shopping centre in the city. It opened on 6 December 1979, and has 65 shops. In 2003, construction began to add 10 new units, and outlets in the centre now include Tesco, Penneys, New Look, Life Style Sports, and Easons. [1] [2]
The business established further shops in Galway, in Wilton, Cork, and in Blackrock, Dublin in the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1990s increased to 8 shops in Dublin and open in Waterford in 1993. It expanded into Northern Ireland with a shop at The Quays Shopping Centre in Newry in 1999. [ 3 ]
Dundrum Town Centre – one of the two largest shopping complexes in Ireland [3] George's Street Arcade; Ilac Centre; Jervis Shopping Centre; Liffey Valley; Merrion Centre; Northside Shopping Centre – the first covered shopping centre in Ireland; Nutgrove Shopping Centre; Omni Park; The Square Tallaght; Stephen's Green Shopping Centre ...
Wilton is a suburb of Cork City.It is the site of Cork University Hospital, [1] Cork's largest hospital. Other landmarks include Wilton Shopping Centre and St. Finbarr's Cemetery, which lies on the border between Wilton and Glasheen and is the resting place of some of Cork's most notable citizens.
Marks & Spencer had agreed to acquire the company's Wilton outlet in Cork; however that deal later fell through due to a dispute over rent with the owners of the centre. [9] The eleventh store, in Dublin's Nutgrove Shopping Centre, was closed. [10]
The Cork Street Fever Hospital (also known as the House of Recovery) was a hospital that opened in Cork Street on 14 May 1804. The hospital was extended in 1817-1819 to help cope with a national typhus epidemic. In 1953 the Cherry Orchard Hospital in Ballyfermot replaced the old Cork Street hospital, which was renamed Brú Chaoimhín and became ...
Talbot Mall (formerly known as Irish Life Mall and later Irish Life Shopping Mall prior to a 2013 rebranding) was a small shopping arcade located between Talbot Street, Northumberland Square, and Abbey Street in Dublin, Ireland. Operating for some years with only a few trading units, it latterly primarily formed a public passage between Talbot ...
Quinnsworth was a supermarket chain that operated in Ireland from 1966 to 1997. During its time in operation, it grew to be one of Ireland's leading retailers, with approximately one quarter of the grocery market in the Republic of Ireland, and some 88 supermarkets across the island of Ireland, including its Crazy Prices brand operated at some of its larger outlets.