Shopping’s centers are the places where you can find all basic necessaries and luxurious things like perfumes, dresses, electronics, fast foods, stationeries etc under one roof, great place to eat, shop with your family and friends. It’s like a whole city in one building having all the convenience of high streets. Besides shopping the mall are the ideal areas for trade.
10. Camden Market
The Camden markets, the fourth-most popular visitor attraction in the London, are a number of adjacent large retail markets in Camden Town near the Hampstead Road Lock of the Regent’s Canal (popularly referred to as Camden Lock), originally operated on Sundays. The markets have six sections in which Crafts, clothing, bric-a-brac, and fast food are sold. Large numbers of traders operate throughout the week in this trade area.
9. Oxford Street
Oxford Street Oxford Street is a major road, 1.5 mi (2.4 km) long and Europe’s busiest shopping street in the City of Westminster in the West End of London, forms a part of A40 trunk road..Oxford street contains 300 shops and Known for Shopping, Selfridges, Marble Arch, Oxford Circus, a home of major departmental stores, various flagship stores and hundred of smaller shops, though not the most expensive or fashionable and forms part of a larger shopping district with Regent Street, Bond Street and numerous other smaller nearby streets.
8. The Brunswick
The Brunswick Shopping Centre grade II listed residential and shopping centre in the centre of Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England, constructed on the site of a former Debenhams store, inaugurated on July 23, 1990, extended between 54.280934°N to 0.402495°W.it constitutes 130,000 sq ft (12,000 m2),5 floors,31 Stores and services, 560 flats, various shops, cafés and restaurants, a Waitrose supermarket, and the Renoir Cinema .The mall is developed by PRUPIM Limited and designed by Patrick Hodgkinson.
7. Notting Hill
Notting Hill, a cosmopolitan developed in 1820s, famous for annual Notting Hill Carnival, and for Portobello Road Market in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in central London, fashionable area known for attractive terraces of large Victorian townhouses, and high-end shopping and restaurants around Westbourne Grove and Clarendon Cross. Ladbroke Grove, Notting Hill Gate, Portobello Road, Westbourne Grove are the popular areas in the Hill.
6. Canada Square
Canada Square, London Borough of Tower Hamlets is a public place and a complex of three interconnected office buildings at Canary Wharf, located on Isle of Dogs in London’s Docklands along the River Thames in the eastern end of the Central London and surrounded by the tallest buildings in the UK. The complex is associated with the Canary Wharf tube station on the Jubilee line and the Canary Wharf DLR station on the Docklands Light Railway.
5. Bond Street and Mayfair
Bond Street is Europe’s most expensive retail location, is a home of many fashion shops runs between Oxford Street and Piccadilly in the West End of London, United Kingdom (UK). The street comprising two sections, the southern section is known as Old Bond Street and the longer northern section is known as New Bond Street. “Allies”, a statue of Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt, who are portrayed sitting on a park bench in conversation, sculpted by Lawrence Holofcener are featured signs of this street. Mayfair is in central London, by the east edge of Hyde Park, in the City of Westminster. The district is a commercial area associated with offices for major corporation’s headquarters, embassies, and also hedge funds and real estate businesses.
4. Boxpark
Boxpark London’s first pop-up (flash retailing) shopping mall prepared completely from shipping containers (61 steel shipping crates-41 of them formed the lower section in a footprint while the upper section let the shopper stretch out a little bit),situated next to the Underground Shoreditch station to the north-east of central London, is convenient, pedestrian-friendly, and packed with popular stores. The mall is occupied with a varied group of both local and large-scale retailers, along with coffee and food shops.
3. Covent Garden
Covent Garden is a district in London between St. Martin’s Lane and Drury Lane on the eastern periphery of the West End, a popular shopping and tourist site, known for the Royal Opera House and imaginative arts and crafts. The district is divided by the main through street of Long Acre, north of which found independent shops, Neal’s Yard and Seven Dials in the center, central square with its street performers and most of the elegant buildings, theatres and entertainment facilities, including the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and the London Transport Museum in the south. The Garden is associated with hip fashion, exclusive gifts and sweets and one-off handmade jewellery, funky cosmetics and shoes on Neal Street.
2. King’s Road
Kings Road, a major street in Chelsea, London, UK, stretches 1.9 mi (3.1 km) through Chelsea and Fulham, in west London, known for Sloane Square tube station and Saatchi Gallery, remained a private royal road until 1830, but people with associations were able to use it. Shopping is the King’s Road’s main passion – here you’ll find an eclectic mix of trendy boutiques, unique labels, designer shops,1960s style and fashion figures such as Mary Quant and Vivienne Westwood and high-street staples, alongside a vast range of cafes and eateries. It’s also a great place for inspirational interior design, among Peter Jones, Heal’s and Cath Kidston.
1. Westfield London
Westfield London is a largest urban shopping centre located in White City, London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. United Kingdom on the site where bounded by West Cross Route-A3220, the Westway-A40 and Wood Lane-A219. The ranked first shopping center in London was formed by Westfield group, made cost of £1.6bn and opened for trade and shopping on October 30, 2008. Jason Forbes designed structure of this Mall. It constitutes 372 Stores and Services, 5 anchor tenants.5 floors and 4500 parking’s, more than 275 luxury, premium and high-street retailers showcasing over 700 brands together with Louis Vuitton, Jimmy Choo, All Saints and Ted Baker as well as a cinema, gym, numerous bars and restaurants, all under one roof. The total retail area of this center is 150,000m² (1,614,600 ft²).
Top 10 Best and Most Famous Shopping Centers in London
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