Golden Island Shopping Centre | |
Location: | Athlone, Ireland |
Coordinates: | 53.42°N -7.9329°W |
Address: | Kilmaine, Athlone, County Westmeath, Ireland |
Number Of Stores: | 45 |
Parking: | 1,000 spaces |
Golden Island Shopping Centre is a shopping centre located in Athlone, County Westmeath, Ireland.
The centre, which is situated in the townland of Goldenisland (Kilmaine),[1] was developed, on the site of a former landfill, by Owen O'Callaghan, Michael Tiernan and Tom Diskin. With the aim of attracting more business to the Midland Region of Ireland, the centre opened in October 1997,[2] and has gained a footfall of 65,000 a week.
The shopping centre was sold to Tesco for €52 million in 2005, and it was registered on .[3] [4]
Tesco stated in June 2015 that it was considering selling the centre, and the building was purchased by Credit Suisse on for €43.4 million.[5]
On 1 May 2019, Credit Suisse put the centre on sale for €41 million.[6] It was purchased by a fund managed by Davy Real Estate in late 2019.[7] [8]
The centre contains 45 units, including clothing retailers (such as Penney's and Diesel), health shops, mobile phone providers, and restaurants and cafés (such as Costa Coffee, Burger King and Insomnia). The anchor unit at the eastern end of the centre is a large Tesco supermarket, selling food and clothes. The Tesco unit was originally intended to be a Quinnsworth supermarket, but Quinnsworth was acquired by Tesco shortly prior to the shopping centre opening.[9] [10]
The shopping centre also contains an IMC cinema, which opened in 1998 with six screens and a capacity of 871 seats.[11] [12] This cinema replaced the former, four-screen, Showcase Cinema, which was located above the old Athlone Shopping Centre in Irishtown, and which opened in May 1992 and closed in early 1998, when the operator of the Showcase Cinema went into partnership with the IMC to open the cinema in the Golden Island shopping centre. Prior to that, there had been no cinema in Athlone following the closure of the Ritz Cinema located beside the Shannon bridge in 1985 and the closure in the late 1970s of the Adelphi Cinema located in Garden Vale.[13] [14]