Centro Santa Fe

Coordinates: 19°21′45″N 99°16′20″W / 19.362383°N 99.272235°W / 19.362383; -99.272235

Centro Santa Fe during 2012 expansion. Main anchors left to right: El Palacio de Hierro, Saks Fifth Avenue, Sanborns and Liverpool. The new Sears wing is under construction at the right

Centro Santa Fe, often incorrectly named "Centro Comercial Santa Fe",[1] is a large enclosed shopping mall in the Santa Fe area of Cuajimalpa, Mexico City,[2] approximately 400,000 square metres (4,305,564 sq ft) in size. Centro Santa Fe[3] is the largest shopping center in Latin America, 108,000 square metres (1,162,502 sq ft) costing 270 billion old Mexican pesos (270 million current pesos).[4] Some sources state that it reclaimed this title in late 2012 when a large expansion project was completed.[5]

Anchors include El Palacio de Hierro, Liverpool, Sanborns, Sears, and Saks Fifth Avenue department stores, an multiplex cinemex with 22 theatres also one theatre with Dolby Atmos , and a Chedraui Select supermarket. It has about 500 stores in total, a corporate office tower and a 450-room hotel.[5] As of October 2013 it was home to Mexico's only H&M store.[6]

As of 2012 the center had about 1,500,000 visitors per month or 20 million per year.[5]

References

  1. Example: Google Maps
  2. "Localización." Centro Santa fe. Retrieved on June 27, 2015. "Centro Santa Fe Av. Vasco de Quiroga 3800, Delegación Cuajimalpa, Col. Antigua Mina La Totolapa, 05109 Ciudad de Mexico, D.F."
  3. Historia y Evolución, Centro Comercial Santa Fe, retrieved 2013-10-05
  4. Currículum: Año 1993 [Résumé: Year 1993] (in Spanish), CAABSA, retrieved 2013-10-05
  5. 1 2 3 Luz Elena Mota Rodríguez (2012-07-28), "Centro Comercial más grande de AL, en Santa Fe" [Largest shopping center in Latin America (is) in Santa Fe], Barrio
  6. "H&M breidt uit naar Zuid Amerika" [H&M expands to South America], Fashion United (in Dutch), 2013-04-23, retrieved 2013-10-04

External links

Official website

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.