The Mall Athens

The Mall Athens is a shopping mall in Athens, Greece. It was the first of the kind to be constructed in Greece and one of the largest shopping and leisure centres in Southeastern Europe.[1] The Mall Athens is located close to the Athens Olympic Stadium in the suburb of Maroussi and was opened to the public on November 25, 2005.[2] It has approximately 200 outlets for commercial and entertainment use, spread over four levels, and covers about 58,500 square meters with 90,000 square meters of underground space.[3]

The Mall Athens
LocationMaroussi, Athens, Greece
Websitehttp://www.themallathens.gr/

Built under the pretext of the 2004 Athens Olympic Games, its construction and operation have evolved into one of the biggest Greek scandals of the last decade[4][5] involving real-estate, construction and commercial corporations, heads of government, ministers, mayors[6] and the media.[7] Its main competitors in the region of Attica are Golden Hall, Avenue, Athens Heart, River West and mainly Athens Metro Mall.

Visitor information

The Mall provides access for handicapped persons and has a play area for children, along with a babysitting service and a special children’s care area. It also has a first-aid area. Automated teller machines are available. Opening hours are Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Restaurants, cafes and cinemas are open Monday to Sunday until the early hours, while parking areas operate from 9 a.m. to 3 a.m.

The Mall’s Third Level houses a Village Cinema multiplex, an amusement park and a restaurant/food court area.

Access

Access is by metro and suburban railway networks (Nerantziotissa station), as well as by the Attiki Odos highway.

The Mall Athens controversy

The Olympic Games pretext

A sign outside The Mall reads: “Olympic Media Village”. That’s because The Mall is an Olympic project that was, nevertheless, inaugurated a full year after the Games (the Media Village was meant to provide accommodation to foreign journalists).

Before the Olympics, the site currently occupied by the shopping center was grazing land for sheep. However, major road and rail infrastructure projects turned it into a prime piece of real-estate. The site belonged to the state and was meant for social housing. Instead, it was sold at a discount to Lamda Development, the Latsis Group subsidiary which erected The Mall.

The agreement between the Greek state and Lamda focused on the construction of a housing complex to accommodate a number of foreign journalists during a 15-day period.[8] In exchange, the state changed the laws so that Lamda could build a giant shopping center on land which it did not own, under terms not allowed by the Greek Constitution.

"The largest illegal construction in Europe"?

The Mall scandal involves Spiros Latsis and his corporation, members of both major Greek political parties (including the former and current Prime Ministers), their government ministers (who introduced legislation contrary to the Constitution), the local mayor, Mr. Tzanikos (who came up with the idea for the construction and is currently being sued in court) and, last but not least, the president of Athens 2004, Gianna Angelopoulou. Against them, stood only a handful of citizens along with some members of the judiciary.

Following a motion brought by a citizen, Dorilaos Klapakis, the Greek Supreme Court (SC) ruled in 2003 that the laws passed for The Mall were indeed unconstitutional and ordered the cessation of its construction.[9] Lamda corporation and the state (ministries in charge and the police) ignored the ruling, so construction proceeded regardless.

Over the next 3 years, major Greek politicians tried to fight the SC’s decision and avoid further legal repercussions by introducing legislation, contrary to the Constitution but favorable to the Mall, and then ruling the new laws untouchable by the Greek Supreme Court.

In November 2005, one year after the Olympic Games, The Mall is inaugurated. Tens of stores and movie theatres, including multinational brands, operate illegally and without a license in spite of the police having pressed charges against them. The Mall also served at the time as an experiment in labor market conditions: within The Mall, the branch of Eurobank Ergasias, a bank also owned by the Latsis Group, operated for a while on Saturdays, in violation of labor legislation and with the acquiescence of the government.

Moreover, Lamda has yet to meet most of the commitments it made towards Athens 2004, the local authority and the public organization that owned the land, when it was awarded the “Media Village” project in March 2002:

- Instead of hosting 6.000 journalists, as originally planned, the Media Village accommodated a mere 1.000.[10] - The land purchase was only settled in early 2006. That means that the Mall was being built from 2001 to 2005 and eventually opened in late 2005 on public land that Lamda Development did not own or rent.

- The 20-acre (81,000 m2) park that Lamda was supposed to build next to The Mall is still a bus parking lot.

The Mall Athens trial

The case of the Mall was brought for a second time before the Supreme Court of Greece in 2003. Since then, and six years after the building was first ruled illegal, the SC has not yet reached a decision. A new date was set for October 2009. Lots of things will be at stake during the trial and the subsequent court decision. First and foremost, the very existence of The Mall itself. Second, whether the Greek government will still be able, through the gimmick of ad hoc legislation that it used over the Mall case, to ignore the Supreme Court's decisions in other important environmental cases that trouble this country.

The media black-out

Greek media (with slight exceptions,[11][12]) played a dual part in the Mall case: while The Mall was under construction, they concealed the Media Village scandal, which, despite being obvious, did not receive as much as a comment.

Outside Greece, the Latsis Group (which holds a majority stake in the Mall Athens) is also dealt with extreme caution by the international media. While the British newspapers The Times,[13][14] and The Telegraph [15] dealt with the close relationship between Spiro Latsis and José Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, they soon backtracked, under the threat of litigation.

Bomb attack

An explosive device behind a newspaper stand at The Mall Athens slightly injured two security staff on Sunday morning 20 January 2013. A warning was issued by telephone to a newspaper and a website about an hour earlier, allowing evacuation of the mall.[16]

Death

On March 27, 2019, a 40-year-old woman started approaching the handrail of the mall's 3rd floor, only to be seen falling from it internal stairs, and ending up on the 1st floor. There was direct intervention by the National Emergency Center, the police and the competent authorities.[17] The woman was shortly after transported to the KAT Hospital, where it was confirmed that she had passed away.[18] The event received wide news coverage and is believed that it was a suicide attempt.

Ownership

The Mall is owned by Lamda Development, a real-estate development firm within the Latsis Group, and HSBC Property Investments, each holding a 49.2% stake. The municipality of Marousi owns the rest.

gollark: The only good language is HaskirusCvathon++.js.
gollark: I think we need snake detectors at airports, obviously.
gollark: Couldn't snakes be deliberately put on a plane by terrorists?
gollark: There are some live CDs which load all the relevant data into RAM on boot, but this isn't done for regular systems.
gollark: Well, it isn't.

References

  1. Greece's largest shopping and leisure centre, The Mall Athens, opens its doors, Cushman & Wakefield, 28/11/2005
  2. Consumers welcome on Friday the Mall Athens (in greek), in.gr, 25/11/2005
  3. "The Mall Athens". www.themallathens.gr. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  4. facthemall Archived 2011-05-11 at the Wayback Machine, a non-profit journalistic project on the Mall Athens case (in greek),
  5. Damian Mac Con Uladh, "Mall mayor gets a year in jail," Athens News, 20 February 2009.
  6. ""The Mall's Twelve", facthemall (in greek)". Archived from the original on 25 October 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  7. ""The Media Omerta", facthemall (in greek)". Archived from the original on 30 September 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  8. "100.000 sq.m. built forever = How many journalists for 15 days?", facthemall Archived 2009-10-26 at the Wayback Machine(in greek)
  9. The housing impact of the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens (pdf), Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions, 2007
  10. ""100.000 sq.m. built forever = How many journalists for 15 days?", facthemall (in greek)". Archived from the original on 26 October 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  11. "GALERA magazine, an in depth investigation of the story (in greek), January 2006". Archived from the original on 2 October 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  12. "facthemall". Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  13. Yachts and storms, Brussels has weathered it all, The Times, 28/10/2008
  14. Mandelson rejects ‘EU tittle-tattle’, The Times, 20/4/2005
  15. Latsis links with the EU are above board, Christopher Booker's notebook, The Telegraph, 1/5/2005
  16. http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_wsite1_1_20/01/2013_479386 Ekhatemirini 20 January 2013, Bomb injures two at The Mall Athens.
  17. "Η ανακοίνωση του εμπορικού κέντρου «The Mall» για την αυτοκτονία γυναίκας". protothema.gr (in Greek). 2019-03-28. Retrieved 2019-07-02.
  18. "Mall – Μαρούσι: Μιλούσε στο τηλέφωνο μέχρι που έπεσε από τον 3ο όροφο – Τα στοιχεία για την τραγωδία στο εμπορικό κέντρο". thecaller.gr (in Greek). 2019-03-27.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.