词条 | Canberra Centre |
释义 |
| shopping_mall_name = Canberra Centre | image = | image_width = | caption = | location = 148 Bunda Street, Civic, Canberra | opening_date = 6 March 1963 | closing_date = | developer = | manager = | owner = | number_of_stores = 310 | number_of_anchors = 5 | floor_area = {{convert|89,500|m2|sqft|0|abbr=on}} | floors = 2-3 | parking = | website = canberracentre.com.au | footnotes = }}{{Refimprove|date=June 2008}} Canberra Centre is a shopping centre located in Civic, Canberra, Australia. It opened on 6 March 1963 as the Monaro Mall,[1] and it was designated an Australian Capital Historic Site in 1997. It underwent a $220 million redevelopment and became the Canberra Centre in 1989. It was the first shopping centre in Canberra to have a car park operated by Car Park Ticket Machines. Canberra centre is currently 89,500 m² in size with over 310 speciality retailers.{{cn|date=May 2016}} HistoryPrime Minister Robert Menzies opened the original shopping centre, known as the Monaro Mall, on 6 March 1963. At the time it was the first Australian three-storey, fully enclosed and air conditioned shopping centre.[1] with David Jones, Marcus Clarks, Coles New World Supermarket (now closed), McEwans Hardware (now closed) and 58 speciality shops. The centre was expanded and rebranded as Canberra Centre and was opened officially by Rosemary Follet on 2 November 1989. Canberra Centre originally consisted of 4 city blocks: David Jones, Myer, City Market (a fresh food precinct) and Target. To access either City Market or Target, you had to either exit the main atrium and cross Bunda Street or access via the now-demolished travelators that ran parallel to Ainslie Avenue from the car parks.{{cn|date=May 2016}} At this time, Canberra Centre was owned and managed by Canberra Advance Bank, which later became St George Bank. In 1992 Queensland Investment Corporation expressed interest in purchasing Canberra Centre and put in a 50% stake purchase of the centre. In 1993 the old Bunda Street entrance was aligned diagonally to be on the corner of Petrie Plaza and Bunda Street. Another extension occurred in 1993 of the Upper Floor fashion atrium, where Pumpkin Patch is now (pumpkin patch is no longer there in Canberra Centre). It was not until 2002 when a major expansion occurred, by extending the atrium by crossing over Bunda Street and closing Ainslie Avenue to allow access to City Market and Target without going outdoors. By this time, the original atrium was under refurbishment. The columns were painted in shades of white and dark green, replacing the previous watery-blue and maroon. Balustrades were re-fitted with stainless steel and painted black, replacing the brass and maroon. The Lower Ground Floor replaced all the brass and maroon chairs and tables, with plastic black and white ones. The Centre Court fountain was removed and replaced with a 360 TV. The centre clock, which ran up 3 levels, was removed due to being maroon and brass. All the toilets were refurbished and centre signage was replaced, again due to being brass letters on maroon wood.{{cn|date=May 2016}} Further expansions were completed in late 2006, this time closing half of the City Market Car Park and City Market for retail space. The new mall added another 100 stores, a second food court and relocated City Market (now called the Fresh Food Precinct). On the northern end of Bunda Street, Canberra Centre's new dining and entertainment precinct, North Quarter houses restaurants on street level and indoor.{{cn|date=May 2016}} On 28 February 2007, a severe thunderstorm known as a "supercell" passed over Canberra causing flash flooding, severe hail and property damage. The Canberra Centre along with the Australian National University and Campbell High School sustained heavy damage with flooding and damage to internal fit out.[2] Severe damage was inflicted on most parts of the centre including the brand new expansion. The first sign of trouble for those inside the centre came when water began pouring from the ceiling of the Dendy Cinema. After ten minutes, staff began a hasty evacuation. Borders (now closed) also sustained heavy damage and flooding.[3] In mid - 2013 the lower ground level food court was closed due to its refurbishment that will finish late - 2013. The David Jones lower ground level closed as well. Myer lower ground level continued to open. On Thursday 31 October 2013 the new Refurbished Lower Level Food Court was opened so as the Myer and David Jones lower ground.{{cn|date=May 2016}} In July 2017, a renovated section of the Canberra Centre known as Monaro Mall reopened as the Beauty precinct with brands like Jurlique, Lush, Crabtree and Evelyn, Mecca Maxima, Inglot, L'occitane, Aveda .[4] New fashion brands H&M, Gorman, and Calvin Klein were also opened in 2017.[5] References1. ^1 Canberra District Historical Society page about Territory places including Civic {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130912075512/http://www.canberrahistory.org.au/discover.asp |date=2013-09-12 }} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://samuelgordonstewart.com/2007/03/the-final-word-on-the-storm|title=Television news coverage of storm damage|publisher=Samuel's Blog}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://the-riotact.com/?p=4375|title=Coverage and commentary on storm damage|publisher=The-RiotACT}} 4. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.canberracentre.com.au/blog/canberras-new-beauty-destination|title=Canberra's new beauty destination {{!}} Canberra Centre|website=www.canberracentre.com.au|language=en|access-date=2017-09-28}} 5. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/canberra-life/hm-gorman-and-calvin-klein-underwear-are-opening-at-canberra-centre-20170904-gya459.html|title=It's happening - H&M is opening in Canberra|last=Hogan|first=Jil|date=2017-09-04|work=Canberra Times|access-date=2017-09-28|language=en-US}} External links
3 : Shopping centres in the Australian Capital Territory|Shopping malls established in 1963|Tourist attractions in Canberra |
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