City Lade Shopping Mall

City Lade is a shopping mall in Trondheim, Norway. It is found in the eastern part of Trondheim, called Lade. It is owned by Trondos, the Trondheim Cooperative.[2] There are 100 separate businesses in the shopping mall.[3][7] The mall was built by Veidekke and completed in 2004.[1] City Lade was expanded in 2012-2014 making it Trondheim's Largest shopping mall in both area 862,000 sq ft (80,100 m2) and stores.[5][3]

City Lade Shopping Mall
2015 photo of the City Lade Shopping Mall in Lade
LocationTrondheim, Norway
Coordinates
AddressHaakon VIIs gate 97041
Trondheim, Norway
K2B 8C1
Opening dateMay 6, 2004[1]
DeveloperVeidekke
OwnerTrondos[2]
ArchitectARC Arkitekter AS[2]
No. of stores and services100[3]
Total retail floor area862,000 sq ft (80,082.4 m2)[4][5]
No. of floors2
ParkingIndoor basement[6], and outdoor
Public transit accessBus no. 2 and get off at Lade Idrettsanlegg
WebsiteCity Lade Mall Website

History

Inside the City Lade Mall

The mall started out as a warehouse for Coop Norge which was converted into a shopping center.[3][2] The mall has 10 restaurants and was constructed in 2002.[8][9] In 2004 when the mall was completed the shopping mall had a total of 388,000 sq ft (36,000 m2) of retail space.[2] The mall is located in the city of Trondheim, which is the third largest city in Norway. the city of Trondheim is a shopping destination.[10] The City Lade Mall has seventy-four separate businesses operate in the mall as of July 2020. The stores inclued: Hennes & Mauritz and BigBite, and the large grocery store: Coop Obs!. On the lower level of the mall there is a Vinmonopolet (the wine monopoly).[8][11]

2013 expansion and renovation

In 2012 Veidekke Entreprenør was awarded the contract for a major remodeling and expansion project at the mall. The remodeling project included an additional building 107,600 sq ft (10,000 m2). Existing buildings in the mall were also updated, and underground parking was added. The total cost of the expansion and remodel was 342 million Krone.[5] The expansion and remodel of City Lade added 75 new stores (to bring the total to 100 stores) and made City Lade Trøndelag's largest mall.[3]

A pile jetting foundation was the method employed for reinforcing the existing buildings, and for support of the underground parking structure which was part of the project.[6] The mall was remodeled in 2013 and added 474,000 sq ft (44,000 m2) of space bringing the total amount of space to 862,000 sq ft (80,100 m2).[5][4] At that time the mall also added electric charging stations for their customers.[8]

gollark: [REDACTED] class-υ apiopurposes.
gollark: This is a CANONICAL list of bad and good things,
gollark: ++magic py import main(main.bad_things, main.good_things)
gollark: And heavpoot is gollark alt #12091.
gollark: Also heavpoot used it.

See also

References

  1. "And the child's name is City Lade". Trond Valle. 25 June 2004. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  2. "City Lade in Trondheim". veidekke.no. Veidekke ASA. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  3. "City Lade". Byggeindustrien. 14 October 2014. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  4. Retail Space Europe Yearbook 2010. Noord-Holland Netherlands: Real estate Publishers B.V. 2010. p. 394. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  5. "Veidekke : Major contract for Veidekke at City Lade in Trondheim". Marketscreener. 2 March 2012. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  6. "City Lade, Trondheim". Jetgrunn.no. Jetgrunn AS. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  7. "City Lade". Trondheim.com. The Trondheim Guide. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  8. "Store overview AZ". citylade.no. City Lade. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  9. Retail Space Europe Yearbook 2008. Noord-Holland Netherlands: Real estate Publishers B.V. p. 544. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  10. "Trondheim Intimate charm in the third largest city". visitnorway.com/. Innovation Norway. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  11. Retail Space Europe Yearbook 2009. Noord-Holland Netherlands: Real estate Publishers B.V. 2009. p. 273. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.