Jump to content

Donetsk City (mall)

Coordinates: 48°01′50″N 37°47′15″E / 48.0306°N 37.7875°E / 48.0306; 37.7875
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Donetsk City
Донецьк-Сіті
Exterior of Donetsk City
Map
LocationDonetsk, Ukraine
Coordinates48°01′50″N 37°47′15″E / 48.0306°N 37.7875°E / 48.0306; 37.7875
Opening dateOctober 2006
Total retail floor area115,000 m2 (1,240,000 sq ft)
No. of floors4
Websitedoncity.com.ua

Donetsk City (Ukrainian: Донецьк-Сіті, stylized as: DOHEцЬK CITi) is a large enclosed shopping mall in Donetsk, Ukraine. Located along Artema Street, the mall opened in October 2006 and includes a total area of approximately 115,000 sq. meters.[1][2] It contains over 115 stores, an eight-screen multiplex, bowling alley, and a family entertainment center ("Funtura").[3]

According to a November 2012 report in Forbes Ukraine, Donetsk City is the fifth most-visited shopping center in Ukraine, with an average of 30,000 visitors per day.[3]

The mall is the flagship project of the "Investment and Development" group headed by Igor Gumenuk, Vasily Mikulin, and Irina Friedman. As of January 2013, a fair amount of the office space portion of the project was not yet rented.[4]

Following the outbreak of the war in Donbas in 2014, Donetsk City briefly closed, before reopening a few years later. While most of the shops present at the mall did not return, a few remained functional.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Информация о торгово-развлекательном центре «Донецк Сити», doncity.com.ua, Retrieved 12 March 2014
  2. ^ (27 October 2006). В Донецке открывается новый региональный ТРЦ "Донецк-Сити", ОстроВ (in Russian)
  3. ^ a b Struk, Elena (6 November 2012). Самые посещаемые торговые центры Украины Archived 2014-03-13 at the Wayback Machine, Forbes Ukraine
  4. ^ (28 January 2013). Кто зарабатывает на недвижимости Archived 2014-03-13 at the Wayback Machine, Forbes Ukraine
  5. ^ "Донецьк-2020: жителі розповіли і показали, як змінилося місто" [Donetsk-2020: residents told and showed how the city has changed]. Radio Svoboda (in Ukrainian). 30 August 2020. Retrieved 2023-01-17.
[edit]