CentralWorld

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Shopping mall in Bangkok, Thailand
13°44′49″N 100°32′23″E / 13.74694°N 100.53972°E / 13.74694; 100.53972Address999/9 Rama I RoadOpening date3 December 1989; 34 years ago (1989-12-03) (World Trade Center)
1989; 35 years ago (1989) (Zen Now Close 27 November 2019)
8 April 1992; 32 years ago (1992-04-08) (Isetan Now Close 31 August 2020)
2000; 24 years ago (2000) (Major Cinema Now Close 6 January 2008)
23 December 2002; 21 years ago (2002-12-23) (Central World Plaza)
November 2004; 19 years ago (2004-11) (CentralWorld Offices)
2007; 17 years ago (2007) (SF World Cinema)
8 November 2007; 16 years ago (2007-11-08) (CentralWorld)
2008; 16 years ago (2008) (Centra Grand and Bangkok Convention Centre at CentralWorld)
September 9, 2011; 12 years ago (2011-09-09) (Uniqlo at CentralWorld)
28 November 2019; 4 years ago (2019-11-28) (Central @ CentralWorld)
31 July 2020; 3 years ago (2020-07-31) (Apple Store at CentralWorld)
30 March 2023; 12 months ago (2023-03-30) (Shake Shack at Centralworld)
31 August 2023; 7 months ago (2023-08-31) (Nitori at CentralWorld)DeveloperCentral PattanaManagementPatcharin Apirukworawut[1]OwnerCrown Property Bureau
TBF4ArchitectAltoon + Porter Architects LLPNo. of stores and services495[2]No. of anchor tenants7[2]Total retail floor area187,046 square metres (2,013,346.39 sq ft)[2]No. of floors7[4]Parking7,000[3]Public transit accessSiam BTS Station, Chit Lom BTS stationWebsitewww.centralworld.co.thOther facts and statistics of CentralWorld:
Central Dome

CentralWorld (Thai: เซ็นทรัลเวิลด์, styled as centralwOrld) is a shopping plaza and complex in Bangkok, Thailand.[5] It is the ninth largest shopping complex in the world. The complex, which includes a hotel and office tower, is owned by the company Central Pattana. In 2006, after three years of design and renovation, CentralWorld was expanded to 550,000 m2 (5,900,000 sq ft) of shopping mall and 830,000 m2 (8,900,000 sq ft) of complex, topping nearby rival Siam Paragon in terms of size.

History

Original Name

The mall opened in 1989. Central Group acquired the property In 2002 from the changed the name World Trade Center to Central World Plaza. In 2007, it was renamed CentralWorld. It is on leased Crown Property Bureau land. In its acquisition, the Central Group's property development arm, Central Pattana (SET: CPN), secured a new 30-year lease on the site.[6]

Renovations

Anticipating the opening of the luxury Siam Paragon, CPN started massive renovations and expansion on the site in 2002. CPN changed the name from World Trade Center to Central World Plaza. The original mall structure was 300,000 square meters. The expansion plans boosted that to 430,000 square meters. Though work was not yet complete, CPN held an official opening of the renovated complex on 21 July 2006; it was expected to be fully operational by October 2006. At the time CPN change the name to Centralworld. By May 2007 the mall was fully opened, but some parts of the upper floors remained vacant. Major exterior construction was ongoing on the hotel in the northwest corner of the mall and the extension floors to the ZEN department store in southeast corner.

The renovated complex aimed to attract 150,000 customers per day, spending more than 7 billion baht annually. It marketed itself as a middle class shopping center, opposed to the upper class-market Siam Paragon.[7][8]

CentralWorld did not achieve its goal in term of daily visitors because of several reasons, including political turmoil and an ongoing economic downturn. However, shopper numbers soon increased, though reliable figures are lacking. Bangkok's New Year countdown celebrations were held in front of CentralWorld, which quickly became a tradition, with the number of people increasing every year.

Offices at CentralWorld

Renovations included completing an unfinished office tower, work on which had been 2003 halted in with only 39 of the planned 63 floors completed. Construction resumed in 2003, expanding the tower to a 45-story, 204-meter, design, with the completed tower opening in December 2004.[9]

2010 fire damage

CentralWorld was temporarily closed on 19 May 2010 due to severe arson damage, which occurred as troops dislodged protesters from the area during the 2010 Thailand political protests. The adjoining 'Zen' section suffered massive damage from the rioters.[10][11]

The Isetan portion was reopened soon after. Following repairs, a large part of CentralWorld was reopened on 28 September that year. The 'Zen' section reopened on 6 January 2012.

Mall renovations 2016–2018

Renovations included Enhance circulation and simplified navigation, add escalator in Zone A, re-zone merchandise to suit current market, use open shop-front design to enhance customer experience, enhance linkage to BTS Skytrain, and building for second Apple Store in Thailand.

The renovations started in Autumn 2016 and were due to be completed in 2018.

2019 fire and ZEN renamed into Central

During the evening rush hour on 10 April 2019, a fire that apparently started elsewhere spread to the eighth floor via air vent pipes, and the mall was ordered evacuated. At least two people, both employees, were reported to have died after jumping from the building.[12][13][14][15]

That December, after three decades, ZEN was renamed into Central, positioned as an experimental experience store. The whole Central Department Store's CentralWorld store will be revamped by hiring three famous designers from France, Italy, Germany, and Thailand. The revamp cost 1 billion baht.[16]

Isetan closure and subsequent renovation

On 14 March 2020, Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings and CPN jointly announced the closure of Isetan Bangkok at CentralWorld per 31 August 2020 due to expiration of contract between two parties. After Isetan closes, CPN plans to renovate the area and the façade while negotiating with new department store anchor replacing Isetan. Renovation will be completed per 1Q 2022, with the Japanese feeling and ambience and its authentic Japanese restaurant zone will be kept intact.[17][18]

Location

CentralWorld is located in Pathum Wan District at the Ratchaprasong Intersection in one of Bangkok's busiest shopping and tourism districts.

Facilities

CentralWorld Square
Atrium in 2018
Zone F The Rink in 2011

CentralWorld Square

The largest outdoor activity square in downtown Bangkok, this covered an area of 8 square kilometres, which was for large-scale activities such as The New Year's Eve Countdown party. There were 400 dancing fountain heads incorporated into the plaza. In 2020, Apple Store opened at this square.

Christmas tree displayed outside of CentralWorld

CentralWorld Avenue

CentralWorld Avenue is a six-lane road that circles the complex. It links Rama I Road and Ratchadamri road together.

Anchors

Central Department Store

Main anchors

GROOVE at CentralWorld

Key tenants

UNIQLO First store in Thailand

Former tenants

Centerpoint at CentralWorld

Centara Grand at CentralWorld

Centara Grand is a chain hotel built on land leased from the Crown Properties Bureau. The flagship hotel, the Centara Grand at CentralWorld, is attached to both the CentralWorld mall and the Offices at CentralWorld.

Hotel

Trimurti shrine at the front of Isetan

Floors

Mall& Office wing: B2-B1 parking 1-7 Retail 1-2 groove B2-7 i and Japan avenue B2,1-2 Apple store B2-27 Department Store Wing 8 tk park hall concerts 9-45 Office Hotel wing B1 G-3 3A 4-5 5A 6-7 7A 8 8A 9-10 carpark 22 sky lobby 23-26 28-55 guestrooms 56-57 bars (note 13 floors=12M Floors)(1A 2A 3A 4A 5A 6A 7A 8A 9A 10A is additional floors)

See also

Further reading

Notes

  1. ^ Annual Report 2011, p. 253.
  2. ^ a b c Annual Report 2011, p. 55.
  3. ^ Annual Report 2011, p. 48.
  4. ^ Form 56-1 2011, p. 20.
  5. ^ Asia Web, CentralWorld
  6. ^ Jitpleecheep, Sukanya. "Plenty of new offerings in store" Archived 12 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Bangkok Post Year-End 2002 Economic Review (retrieved 21 July 2006).
  7. ^ Nguyen, Lan Anh (21 July 2006). "Unfinished CentralWorld to hold grand opening", ThaiDay (print edition).
  8. ^ Thai News Agency (21 July 2006). Thailand's largest shopping complex CentralWorld opens July 21 Archived 12 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine, MCOT (retrieved 22 July 2003).
  9. ^ Bangkok Highrises – Central World Tower
  10. ^ Bangkok Post (19 May 2010). Several bodies were found in the damaged area, thought to have been looters trapped by the fire. [1] (retrieved 26 April 2011).
  11. ^ Bangkok Post (21 May 2010). [2] (retrieved 26 April 2011).
  12. ^ "CentralWorld: Deadly blaze at Bangkok shopping complex", BBC News, 10 April 2019.
  13. ^ "Fire kills 2 at CentralWorld in Bangkok", Bangkok Post, 10 April 2019.
  14. ^ "Fire at Bangkok shopping mall kills at least two, injures 16", Reuters, 10 April 2019.
  15. ^ Jintamas Saksornchai, "2 Mall Staff Likely Jumped to Death While Aiding Fire Rescue: Official", Khaosod English, 11 April 2019.
  16. ^ "Central earmarks B10bn for revamp". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  17. ^ https://www.prahchachat.net/marketing/news-432211
  18. ^ "Isetan to exit Thailand after 28 years". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 16 March 2020.

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to CentralWorld.