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Warsow 2015
Warsow 2015












warsow 2015 warsow 2015

Polish furor was apparently a response to reports that indicated Netanyahu had referred to the Polish nation as a whole. He added that “a not insignificant number” of Poles had collaborated and said “I don’t know one person who was sued for saying that.” I bring it up,” he said, noting the matter of the law had come up in a meeting earlier on Thursday with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki. I know the history and I don’t whitewash it. “Here I am saying Poles cooperated with the Nazis. Still, there is room for the traditional shopping centres, which is illustrated by the construction of Galeria Północna.Questioned on the issue by The Times of Israel during a briefing with the traveling press Thursday, Netanyahu denied suggestions of going along with historical revisionism.

warsow 2015

Rents are between €9-10 in retail parks, and €80-90/m²/month for retail units located on high streets.Īnna Wysocka commented further: “The most important trends that we are observing on the retail market in the Warsaw Agglomeration include extensions and refurbishments of existing projects as well as the development of mixed-use schemes. Monthly prime rents per square metre in shopping centres stand at €110 to €130. The vacancy rate in modern shopping centres currently stands at 1.5%, which is a significantly lower result than the national average for cities above 200,000 residents (3.1%). Furthermore, the food and restaurant segments developed as well as Paul, Fuddruckers, Dairy Queen, Benihana, Dunkin’ Donuts have also entered the market.” In 2015, the Warsaw market saw the debuts of international fashion chains - Superdry, Kiabi and Courir, and cosmetics brands - Origins. Shopping centres account for up to 106,700m² with Galeria Północna, located on Białołęka, the largest project under development at the moment.”Īnna Wysocka, head of retail agency at JLL, commented: “Warsaw remains the bridgehead for debuts and further expansions for numerous foreign brands, especially those looking for prestigious locations. 120,000m² of retail space is now under construction. This situation, however, is likely to change in the mid to long-term as approx. “The Warsaw agglomeration, with its average shopping centre density of 447m² per 1,000 residents, remains one of the least dense markets in Poland and lags behind other major metropolitan cities such as Wrocław, Poznań, Tri-City, Łódź and Kraków. The biggest project commissioned for use was the extension of Wola Park. The Warsaw agglomeration is the biggest retail market in Poland, offering a total of approximately 1.65 million m² of space in formats such as: shopping centres (over 1,14 million m²), retail parks (265,000m²), retail warehouses (186,000m²) and outlet centres (56,000m²).Īnna Bartoszewicz-Wnuk, head of research and consulting at JLL Poland, said: “In 2015, the Warsaw Agglomeration grew by 64,000m² of new retail space with shopping centres accounting for 45,900m² of this number. JLL has summarised 2015 on the Warsaw agglomeration's retail market.














Warsow 2015