The 1972 Managua earthquake virtually destroyed all of the existing supermarkets, shops and department stores in the city of Managua. New shopping centers and malls were rebuilt on other locations, which formed the bases for Managua's dispersed structure.
History
The seventies: rebuilding Managua
The Somoza regime declared 1973 as the year of "Hope and Reconstruction".[1] Many of the shops destroyed by the earthquake were relocated to the premises of the old Livestock Fair, next to the Colonia Centroamerica neighborhood, forming the Centro Comercial Managua, built in provisional facilities.
A modern and more permanent shopping center was built in 1974, the Centro Comercial Camino de Oriente, with movie theaters, restaurants, a bowling alley and two night clubs, the Lobo Jack and Infinito Discotheque. Under the same premise, a smaller shopping center at the Colonia Centroamerica was built, the Plaza de Compras de la Centroamerica, today almost abandoned housing only a supermarket, a fast food chain and some smaller office spaces.[2]
Several commercial projects were carried out in the seventies, all of them in the new neighborhoods of the periphery of Managua, such as the Centro Comercial Plaza España, built in 1975 in the upscale Bolonia neighborhood.[3] Other shopping centers of that time are the Centro Comercial Nejapa, which housed the Managua Local District Court until the end of 2012,[4] and similar developments in the neighborhoods of Bello Horizonte, Ciudad Jardin and Linda Vista.
Present and future
Many of the shopping centers built in the seventies are now partially abandoned or used for other purposes. One notable exception is Metrocentro Managua, built in 1974 by Salvadorean investors, and renovated and extended with more store space and the building of the four-star Hotel Real InterContinental Metrocentro Managua in 1998 and 2004.[5][6]
In 1998, thanks to the economic improvement after the civil war of the last decade, the new Plaza Inter shopping mall was built in Managua's historical center by foreign investors.[7]
As Managua spread out following the earthquake, a large number of strip malls, or shopping plazas, were built all around the city. These strip malls are home to a small number of stores, usually between five and fifteen, and are located in Managua's main commercial arteries and neighbourhoods. A non-exhaustive list of strip malls includes:[17]
Centro Comercial Alpha
Centro Comercial Ciudad Jardín
Centro Comercial El Tiangue
Centro Comercial Linda Vista
Centro Comercial Plaza España
Plaza Bolonia
Plaza Cadin
Plaza Caracol
Plaza Conchito
Plaza Consuelo
Plaza El Güegüense
Plaza Flamingo
Plaza Mayor
Plaza Nogal
Plaza Porta's
Plaza San Agustín
Plaza Santrinni
Plaza Toscana
Plaza Trébol
Shopping Center Las Colinas
Gallery
Cinemas at the fourth floor of Plaza Inter shopping mall.
Third phase of Metrocentro, completed in 2004, with anchor store Carrión
Galerías Santo Domingo shopping mall during Christmas