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Core Pacific City
Former shopping mall in Taipei, Taiwan
Former shopping mall in Taipei, Taiwan
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Core Pacific City |
| native_name | 京華城 |
| native_name_lang | zh-hant |
| image | Core Pacific City and ROC flags 20081020.jpg |
| image_width | 250px |
| location | Songshan, Taipei, Taiwan |
| opening_date | November 2001 |
| closing_date | 30 November 2019 |
| architect | Shopping mall |
| floor_area | 204,190 m2 |
| floors | 19 |
| parking | Yes |
| publictransit | Nanjing Sanmin MRT station |
| website |

Core Pacific City, also known as the Living Mall (), was a shopping center in Songshan District, Taipei, Taiwan.
History
The shopping mall was built in 2001. During the mall's development and construction, it was touted as the world's first truly 24-hour mall and Asia's first "city within a city" complex. When it first opened, the mall was open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Before Core Pacific opened in 2001, its management had been fined by the Taipei city government for failing fire safety inspections. Further fines were levied when the mall opened to the public without actually first obtaining an operating license. In February 2002, a fire at the mall required the evacuation of 20,000 people. The fire was determined to be arson, and in July 2002 former Core Pacific official Lin Chang-cheng (林長成) was convicted of the crime along with two others, Wang Lin-kwun (王林坤) and Lin Ching-chi (林清吉). Losses were estimated at NT$12 million. The opening of Taipei 101's mall in 2003 was expected to affect the revenues of Core Pacific's tenants, although less severely than at other malls due to Core Pacific's lower price points. In 2004, the mall's management company was cited by Taiwan's Fair Trade Commission for unfair trade practices relating to a gift certificate promotion campaign.
In March 2018, the Core Pacific Group put up the shopping mall for auction with real estate broker Cushman & Wakefield. The auction opened to the public on 12 December 2018 with an opening price of NT$38 billion.
Core Pacific City closed on 30 November 2019 and was subsequently demolished. On its final day of operation, 100,000 people came to the mall.
After the demolition, , the redevelopment project at Core Pacific City, was made. During the redevelopment, the Ko Wen-je government approved to increase the complex's floor area ratio from 560% to 840%. This amounted to a gift of $350 million. The prosecutor believed that there was corruption during the project and arrested Ko Wen-je.
Architecture
The shopping mall had a total floor space of 204,190 m2. The structure was a complex of two buildings - an L-shaped building which contains specialty boutiques connected to a sphere which contains the Mira Department Store. The complex consisted of 12 above-ground stories and 7 underground levels. Core Pacific's total 19 story height is attributed to Taipei's extremely expensive land costs.
The sphere, considered to be Core Pacific's most dominant and visible feature, is 11 stories tall and clad in granite imported from Finland, while the L-shaped portion features granite from Spain. The mall's architects were the Jerde Partnership and Artech, Inc. Jerde won the 2002 Gold Nugget Special Award of Excellence at the Pacific Coast Builders Conference/Western Building Show for its effort. The engineering firm Arup was also recognized in 2002 for its work on the mall with a Structural Engineering Association of California Award for Excellence.
In popular culture
- The mall appeared on The Amazing Race 19 as the site of a Hazard task for the Vegas showgirls Kaylani & Lisa, where they had to perform an indoor bungee jump.
- In the 2003 video game SimCity 4 developed by Maxis, the mall was selected as a landmark which players can choose to build in their cities.
References
References
- [http://icsc.org/srch/sct/current/sct9911/17a.php Shopping Centers Today] {{webarchive. link. (2007-10-23)
- "English".
- [https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2001/12/07/114853 Taipei Times – archives]
- [https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2002/02/19/124463], [https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2002/07/16/148450]
- [http://icsc.org/srch/sct/sct0503/page163.php Shopping Centers Today] {{webarchive. link. (2008-11-20)
- "Core Pacific City Co., Ltd. committed an obviously unfair act sufficient to affect trading order in violation of the law by its incomplete disclosure of information concerning the use of and restrictions on gift certificate redemption in a promotional campaign".
- (18 July 2018). "Taipei's Core Pacific City to be auctioned with starting price of US$1.24 billion". Taiwan News.
- (28 November 2019}} Republished as: {{cite news). "Lights turned off at Core Pacific City mall after 18 years in Taipei". Taipei Times.
- (30 November 2019). "Core Pacific City mall closes doors, attracting 100,000 people".
- (Jan 13, 2025). "Court rejects appeal of Ko's detention". [[Taipei Times]].
- (Oct 6, 2024). "Court approves impound request for Core Pacific site". Taipei Times.
- [http://www.iexplore.com/cityguides/Taiwan/Taipei/Shopping Taipei Shopping {{! iExplore.com] {{webarchive. link. (2007-09-21)
- [http://icsc.org/srch/sct/sct0502/page167b.php Shopping Centers Today] {{webarchive. link. (2009-01-19)
- [http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-7462927_ITM Taiwan retail complex is clad in Finnish granite. {{! Stone World (October, 2002)]
- [http://www.artech-inc.com/html/portfolio/hospitality/Corepacific_city.htm Portfolio [ Corporate & Institutional ]] {{webarchive. link. (2004-12-15)
- [https://www.jerde.com/about/awards.php Jerde : Awards] {{webarchive. link. (2007-10-17)
- link. (2006-03-23)
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