Aberdeen Centre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aberdeen Centre (時代坊) | |
Present logo, with Chinese name |
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Mall facts and statistics | |
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Location | Richmond, British Columbia, Canada |
Opening date | 1989 (original building) 2003 (current building) |
Developer | Fairchild Development |
Management | Fairchild Group |
Owner | Fairchild Group |
No. of stores and services | 150 |
Total retail floor area | 380,000 sq ft |
Parking | Yes, covered |
No. of floors | 3 |
Website | http://www.aberdeencentre.com |
Aberdeen Centre (時代坊) is a shopping mall in Richmond, British Columbia. It is located in the Golden Village district on Hazelbridge Way, bordered by Cambie Road to the north. It primarily serves the Asian-Canadian population in the Greater Vancouver area, but is striving towards an appeal to Western customers as well. It was named after the famous Aberdeen Harbour of Hong Kong. Aberdeen Centre is also in the process of constructing a condominium complex attached to the mall itself.
The mall is owned by the Fairchild Group, a company that also owns and operates many of the Chinese-language television channels and radio stations in Vancouver, Calgary and Toronto.
Contents |
[edit] History
The original Aberdeen Centre (香港仔中心) was built in 1989 and was one of the first Asian malls in Canada. It contained about 50 to 75 stores, including a bowling alley and a movie theatre that showed Chinese films. At that time, the name of the mall was borrowed from the Aberdeen in Hong Kong. In Hong Kong, Aberdeen's Chinese name, 香港仔, literally means "Little Hong Kong". The name of the mall in Chinese thus meant "Little Hong Kong Centre". However, the Chinese name of mall was changed to 時代坊 (meaning "Era Street") when it reopened in 2003, while its English name remained unchanged.
As new Asian malls such as Yaohan Centre and President Plaza opened, it soon became apparent that the original Aberdeen was too small to compete. It was demolished in 2001, and it was rebuilt for approximately $130 million CAD. Architect Bing Thom was hired to design the building.
The current Aberdeen Centre, opened in 2003, is about three times the original mall's size and has around 100 stores, making it one of the largest malls in Richmond. Its primary anchor store is Daiso; this is the company's first store outside of Asia. Other notable stores include BMW Lifestyles Store, Starbucks Coffee and HSBC. There are also a notable number of restaurants located on its upper floors. There is also a small indoor musical fountain at the centre of the mall that performs shows every 30 minutes (similar to the one in front of Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas). [1]
In 2006, the mall became home to the operations of Fairchild Group's Chinese-language TV and radio operations in Vancouver. Fairchild Radio (CJVB AM1470 and CHKG FM96.1) now has studios on the second floor, while Fairchild TV and Talentvision have their news studios on the third floor.
[edit] Transportation
Public transit buses, serviced by TransLink, have connections to the mall, with additional routes to downtown Vancouver and New Westminster. It is also served by the 98 B-Line, a bus rapid transit line to Vancouver International Airport and downtown Vancouver; the Aberdeen Centre stop is called Aberdeen. The future Aberdeen Station of the Canada Line, taking its name from the mall, is slated to be built beside it.
[edit] 2006 murder
On February 9th, a knife battle between four men occurred in the upper food court area of the mall. One man was fatally stabbed in the heart and died at the scene. Another was seriously injured, suffering a knife wound at the back. The two other men fled the scene amid horrified shoppers. It was the first homicide of the year for the City of Richmond. [2]
[edit] Gallery
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Aberdeen Centre Website
- Popular Lifestyle Entertainment Magazine article on Fairchild Media Group's new location at the mall (in Chinese) - accessed May 13, 2006