Shopping Centre shopping in Mexico
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A
Plaza Loreto
Plaza Loreto, a 600m walk south of Plaza San Jacinto, is an unusually attractive shopping mall converted from an old paper factory. Several patios and courtyards are set between the brick buildings and it’s a lot more than just a place to shop. You’ll find a miniamphitheater for free concerts and puppet shows; two multiscreen cinemas (one of them, Cinemanía, devoted to classic and art-house movies and endowed with a nice little lobby bar); a cabaret club, La Planta de Luz; an excellent art museum, and one of the city’s best restaurants, Taberna de León. There are plenty of up-market shops as well, including boutiques and jewelers, plus a branch of Sanborns and the Mixup m…
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Plaza Kukulcán
The largest (and definitely among the stuffiest, attitude-wise) of the indoor malls is chichi Plaza Kukulcán. Of note here is the huge art gallery (taking up nearly half of the 2nd floor); the many stores selling silverwork; and La Ruta de las Indias, a shop featuring wooden models of Spanish galleons and replicas of conquistadors’ weaponry and body armor. But all is not lost; the plaza has a bowling alley and a large food court.
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B
La Isla Shopping Village
Unique among the island’s malls, this is an indoor-outdoor place with canals, an aquarium, ultramodern parasol structures and enough other visual distractions to keep even the most inveterate hater of shopping amused. For tipplers on your list, consider picking up a bottle of xtabentún, a Yucatecan anise-flavored liqueur.
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C
Plaza la Rosa Shopping Arcade
A manageable-sized shopping mall between Génova and Ambero, with stores including Men’s Factory, Campanita children’s wear, Diesel for the streetwise look, Nutrisa health food store and Sorrento for shoes. There’s a Starbucks too for those homesick for their daily slug of latté.
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D
Plaza Milenium
Guadalajara's richest citizens prefer to browse at the big shopping centers, such as Plaza Milenium, 7.5km southwest of the city center, open from approximately 10:00 to 21:00. To reach it, take bus 258 going west from San Felipe and Av Alcalde, or TUR 707 going west on Av Juárez.
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E
Plaza Reforma Mall
This dramatic great slab of a building is home to all the usual international and local high street chains like C&A, Zara, Women’s Secret, Bershka, Pull & Bear and, surprise surprise, yet another branch of the ubiquitous Sanborns.
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F
Mercado 23
Locals head to Mercado 23 for clothes, shoes, inexpensive food stalls, hardware items and so on. If you’re looking for a place without corny T-shirts, this is where to go.
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Galería de Todos Santos
The joy of shopping in Todos Santos lies in wandering the streets and seeing what you turn up. Another of Todos's galleries, and one not to miss, is Galería de Todos Santos.
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G
Pasaje Polanco
The Pasaje Polanco, just west of Dumas, is a classy courtyard complex flanked by sophisticated boutiques as well as a handicrafts store.
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Mercado 28
Locals head to Mercado 28 for clothes, shoes, inexpensive food stalls, hardware items and so on.
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