请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Ever Gotesco Malls
释义

  1. History

  2. Branches

     Current  Former 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{refimprove|date=May 2018}}{{Infobox company
| name = Ever Gotesco Malls
| logo = Logo of Ever Gotesco Malls.jpg
| logo_size = 200px
| image_width =
| type = Shopping malls
| foundation = C.M. Recto Ave., Manila, Philippines (1972)
| location = C.M. Recto Ave., Sta. Cruz, Manila, Philippines
| locations = 2 branches (as of {{CURRENTYEAR}})
| key_people = Jose Go (Founder and CEO)
| area_served = Metro Manila
| industry = Retail industry
| homepage = [https://www.facebook.com/evergotescomallsofficial/ Ever Gotesco Malls Facebook Page]
}}

Ever Gotesco Malls Group of Companies, under the trade name Ever Gotesco Malls, is a shopping mall and retail operator in Metro Manila. It was incorporated on 1972 by Chinese Filipino entrepreneur Jose Go, whose main vision was to develop, conduct, operate and maintain affordable and accessible commercial shopping malls for the Filipino masses. Its main competitors are: Isetann, Gaisano, Megaworld Lifestyle Malls, Walter Mart Malls, Ortigas Malls, Starmalls, Robinsons Malls, SM Supermalls and Ayala Malls. It has 2 branches as of {{CURRENTYEAR}}.

History

Ever Gotesco Malls Group of Companies launched in 1972[1] when Jose Go, aged 24, opened the five-story Ever Emporium on C.M. Recto Ave. in Downtown Manila.

During the martial law, Go took advantage of the low-priced merchandise and was one of the pioneers of one-stop shopping. His store sold low-priced goods to thousands of low-income students who survived on small allowances. The huge volumes sold made up for the goods' thin margins.

By 1975, Go had made Ever Emporium a popular retail name. From Recto, he expanded to Caloocan City, where he built the $6-million, 40,000-square meter Ever Gotesco mall that lured the low- to middle-income residents of the populous city to shop in droves.

With two major shopping malls in the capital and two more elsewhere, Go formed Ever Gotesco Resources and Holdings (EGRH) in 1996. An initial public offering (IPO) that year gave him enough ammunition to expand into uncharted territory.

EGRH acquired a struggling, publicly listed mining company called Suricon that was later renamed Gotesco Land. He also invested in a housing project in Bulacan, North Caloocan, and a hot springs resort in Laguna. He bought a small bank (that later became his biggest headache), a golf course in Tagaytay, and purchase 20 percent worth of stocks in a paging company.

His goal then was ambitious: to build a $2-billion retail-and-property conglomerate that churns out $350 million a year. Unfortunately, the Asian financial crisis, caught him aggressively expanding into other businesses using borrowed dollars. The crisis doubled his debts and forced him to tap into the deposits of his wholly owned Orient Commercial Banking Corp.

The bank went down in history as the first victim of the Asian economic crisis when it closed on Valentine's Day, 1998. Until now, Go is still fighting the foreclosure of his assets by the central bank, which lent over P8 billion to Orient Bank. He is also facing multi-billion peso lawsuits and all his properties have been garnished by the courts. Some of his former properties either ended up being closed, acquired by competitors or shut down entirely.

On March 17, 2012, Ever Gotesco Grand Central Mall in Caloocan burned down in a devastating fire which raged for more than 20 hours. The mall closed down after fire brought under control, and was subsequently demolished and its property title foreclosed and sold.

Ever Gotesco currently survives through its community supermarket chains in Metro Manila, aside from its remaining malls.

Branches

Current

Name Image Date opened Address
Ever Gotesco Commonwealth Center 1994 Commonwealth Ave cor. Batasan Hills, Quezon City, Metro Manila
Ever Gotesco Manila Plaza 1996 C. M. Recto Ave., Quiapo, Manila, Metro Manila

Former

Name Image Date opened Date closed Address Fate
Ever Gotesco Grand Central 1988 March 17, 2012 Rizal Ave Ext, East Grace Park cor. Bustamante Street, Caloocan, Metro Manila Permanently closed due to fire damage. Structure was demolished and for a time was an artificial lake. SM Prime Holdings will reconstruct and redevelop the area as SM City Grand Central, targeted for 2019.
Ever Gotesco Ortigas Complex October 1995 January 1, 2016 Ortigas Ave Ext, Brgy. Sta. Lucia, Pasig, Metro Manila Acquired by SM Prime Holdings, renamed and redeveloped as SM City East Ortigas, which was opened on December 2, 2016.

References

1. ^History of Ever Gotesco Malls

External links

  • [https://www.facebook.com/evergotescomallsofficial/ Ever Gotesco Malls]. Official Facebook Page
  • [https://twitter.com/evergotescomall/ Ever Gotesco Malls]. Official Twitter Page
{{Philippine Mall Companies}}

5 : Real estate companies established in 1972|Retail companies of the Philippines|Companies based in Manila|Retail companies established in 1972|1972 establishments in the Philippines

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/11 11:48:42