Centro Santa Fe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centro Santa Fe
LocationMexico City, Mexico
Coordinates19°21′45″N 99°16′20″W / 19.362383°N 99.272235°W / 19.362383; -99.272235
Opening date1993 (1993)
No. of stores and services500
No. of anchor tenants6
Total retail floor area210,400 square metres (2,265,000 sq ft)
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 (English: Santa Fe Center or Santa Fe Mall), often incorrectly named "Centro Comercial Santa Fe",[1] is a large 210,400-square-metre (2,264,727 sq ft)[2] enclosed shopping mall in the Santa Fe area of Cuajimalpa, Mexico City.[3] Centro Santa Fe[4] is the largest shopping center in Mexico.[2] The original mall, 128,367 m2 (1,381,730 sq ft), cost 270 billion old Mexican pesos (270 million current pesos) in 1993.[5] It was further expanded in 2012.

Within the Centro Santa Fe, two floors above the Sears wing are separately branded as Vía Santa Fe, containing mid-luxury clothing retailers (e.g. Salvatore Ferragamo, La Martina, Dolce & Gabanna), a Cinemex "Platinum" luxury multi-cinema, Casa Palacio (home store run by El Palacio de Hierro, and Mexico's first Apple Store.[6]

Anchors in the main mall are El Palacio de Hierro, Liverpool, Sanborns, Sears, and Saks Fifth Avenue department stores, and a Chedraui Select hypermarket.

As a whole, the mall has about 500 stores in total.

As of 2012 the center as a whole had about 1,500,000 visitors per month or 20 million per year.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ Example: Google Maps
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "The 5 largest shopping centers in Mexico outside the capital". Retrieved December 5, 2020.
  3. ^ "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."
  4. ^ "Centro Santa Fe Official Information".
  5. ^ Currículum: Año 1993 [Résumé: Year 1993] (in Spanish), CAABSA, archived from the original on 2013-10-06, retrieved 2013-10-05
  6. ^ ["Platinum" Vía Santa Fe official website]
  7. ^ 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, archived from the original on 2013-10-06

External links[]

Retrieved from ""