931 resultados para Shopping Mall
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Historia con todos los personajes familiares de los cuentos de hadas. Para dar un paseo por las calles llenas de tiendas y compradores, entre ellos, hadas, gigantes, duendes, dragones, ranas y princesas. El texto señala, cómo hay tiendas de varitas y alas, ingredientes para el caldero, sombreros para gatos, zapatillas de cristal, botas de siete leguas. Tiendas donde los animales domésticos pueden elegir a sus propietarios, donde se pueden disfrutar de tres deseos, o venta de lámparas de magia, y cómo al anochecer todos los personajes vuelven a casa cargados con sus compras.
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Un viaje a la tienda de comestibles, para hacer el encargo de su madre, se convierte para Steve en una extraordinaria aventura, que encuentra toda clase de riesgos en su camino, puesto que una serie de personajes intentan aligerarle la cesta camino a casa y tiene que usar su ingenio para esquivarlos.
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Material de apoyo didáctico para usar en sesiones de lectura guiada, teniendo en cuenta las necesidades del aula y obtener el máximo rendimiento en la lectura con los niños. Para: hacer colecciones de palabras relacionadas con temas específicos, utilizar mayúsculas para los nombres propios, reunir información de las propias experiencias, utilizar fonológica, contextual y gramaticalmente el conocimiento para elaborar nuevas palabras. Mamá y papá van de compras con Adán y Yasmin. Adam termina cansado y entra en una tienda de campaña que está expuesta en los grandes almacenes.
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Se compara lo que hacemos hoy con lo que sucedió cuando nuestros padres abuelos e incluso bisabuelos eran jóvenes. Averiguar qué era ir de compras en el pasado, buscando fotografías antiguas y luego compararlo con ir de compras hoy.
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Se presenta la unidad didáctica de Inglés, Shopping, dirigida al alumnado de Enseñanza Secundaria. El tema analizado se estructura en siete lecciones en las que se estudian diferentes situaciones de consumo y la compra de diferentes productos. Se pretende, tanto el aprendizaje de habilidades comunicativas en Lengua Inglesa como potenciar la educación para el consumo. Se adjunta un cuestionario de autoevaluación del alumnado para su aplicación al finalizar la unidad didáctica.
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Monogr??fico con el t??tulo: ?????Tareas?, un reto que afrontar???
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Resumen basado en el de la publicaci??n
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El propósito de esta investigación es el aportar un estudio que, partiendo del Derecho de Mercado, lleve a reflexionar acerca de las consecuencias de la implantación de grandes superficies comerciales tipo mall -principalmente dentro de las urbes-, tomando para ello en cuenta elementos tales como, la vasta extensión de las superficies de terreno que ocupan, la cantidad y variedad de productos y servicios que concentran, y la gran masa de compradores que atraen. Con ese propósito la investigación define y ubica al mall, tratando de responder el por qué cabe pensar en costes externos para con la estructura urbana, para con la comunidad de establecimientos comerciales menores y para con otros objetos de interés público importantes, de todos los cuales se sugiere planificando mitigar. De ello, la tesis, apoyándose en el Derecho Tributario, plantea la posibilidad de aplicar un tributo, un impuesto, que manteniendo la libertad del inversor, lo induzca a neutralizar los efectos negativos que produce, generando ingresos públicos suficientes para ser invertidos en resolver impactos técnicamente evaluados.
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Purpose – To evaluate the control strategy for a hybrid natural ventilation wind catchers and air-conditioning system and to assess the contribution of wind catchers to indoor air environments and energy savings if any. Design/methodology/approach – Most of the modeling techniques for assessing wind catchers performance are theoretical. Post-occupancy evaluation studies of buildings will provide an insight into the operation of these building components and help to inform facilities managers. A case study for POE was presented in this paper. Findings – The monitoring of the summer and winter month operations showed that the indoor air quality parameters were kept within the design target range. The design control strategy failed to record data regarding the operation, opening time and position of wind catchers system. Though the implemented control strategy was working effectively in monitoring the operation of mechanical ventilation systems, i.e. AHU, did not integrate the wind catchers with the mechanical ventilation system. Research limitations/implications – Owing to short-falls in the control strategy implemented in this project, it was found difficult to quantify and verify the contribution of the wind catchers to the internal conditions and, hence, energy savings. Practical implications – Controlling the operation of the wind catchers via the AHU will lead to isolation of the wind catchers in the event of malfunctioning of the AHU. Wind catchers will contribute to the ventilation of space, particularly in the summer months. Originality/value – This paper demonstrates the value of POE as indispensable tool for FM professionals. It further provides insight into the application of natural ventilation systems in building for healthier indoor environments at lower energy cost. The design of the control strategy for natural ventilation and air-conditioning should be considered at the design stage involving the FM personnel.
A message from the Oracle: the land use impact of a major in-town shopping centre on local retailing
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In enclosed shopping centres, stores benefit from the positive externalities of other stores in the centre. Some stores provide greater benefits to their neighbours than others – for example anchor tenants and brand leading stores. In managing shopping centres, these positive externalities might be captured through rental variations. This paper explores the determinants of rent – including externalities – for UK regional shopping centres. Two linked databases were utilised in the research. One contains characteristics of 148 shopping centres; the other has some 1,930 individual tenant records including rent level. These data were analysed to provide information on the characteristics of centres and retailers that help determine rent. Factors influencing tenant rents include market potential factors derived from urban and regional economic theory and shopping centre characteristics identified in prior retail research. The model also includes variables that proxy for the interaction between tenants and the impact of positive in-centre externalities. We find that store size is significantly and negatively related to tenant with both anchor and other larger tenants, perhaps as a result of the positive effects generated by their presence, paying relatively lower rents while smaller stores, benefiting from the generation of demand, pay relatively higher rents. Brand leader tenants pay lower rents than other tenants within individual retail categories.
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The variety and quality of the tenant mix within a shopping centre is a key concern in shopping centre management. Tenant mix determines the extent of externalities between outlets in the centre, helps establish the image of the centre and, as a result, determines the attractiveness of the centre for consumers. This then translates into sales and rents. However, the management of tenant mix has largely been based on perceived “optimum” arrangements and industry rules of thumb. This paper attempts to model the impact of tenant mix on the rent paid by retailers in larger UK shopping centres and, hence, the returns made by shopping centre landlords. It extends work on shopping centre rent determination (see Working Paper 10/03) utilising a database of 148 regional shopping centres in the UK, with detailed data for over 1900 tenants. Econometric models test the relationship between rental levels and the levels of retail concentration and diversity, while controlling for a range of continuous and qualitative characteristics of each tenant, each retail product, and each shopping centre. Factor analysis is then used to extract the core retail and service categories from the tenant lists of the 148 shopping centres. The factor scores from these core retailer factors are then tested against rent payable. The results from the empirical analysis allow us to generate some clear analytical and empirical implications for optimal retail management.