Saturday, January 29, 2011

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10 Jalan Termahal di Dunia

1. Fifth Avenue (New York City)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 1.850
Price in 2007: $ 1.500
Although there are many attractions which are offered in New York, but hard to find a place where people gather the most crowded than on Fifth Avenue from Central Park to Bryant Park. Although it through Saks, Cartier, Bergdorf Goodman until the Apple Store, Fifth Avenue influential branding to the retailer and the chance to get a huge income. The result, here the most expensive rents in the world and still survive today.

2. Causeway Bay (Hong Kong)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 1.784
Price in 2007: $ 1.213
Hong Kong is expensive. It was nice for the money and quite difficult to find vacant land there to dibangun.Namun so, do not stop the area as a major shopping center in Southeast Asia. What many see is the Japanese retailers, such as 13-story Sogo department stores, as the most recognizable stores in the region.

3. Madison Avenue (New York City)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 1.200
Price in 2007: $ 1.200
Madison Avenue is the second most expensive lokassi in New York City. However do not look as strong as that region tahun2 Fifth Avenue to come. According to Gene Spiegelman, executive director of retail services at Cushman & Wakefield, there was an opportunity lost and retailers try to ask for a cheaper price.

4. Avenue des Champs (Paris)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 1.134
Price in 2007: $ 922
Few roads in the world that is integrated with high-end fashion such as the Champs-Elysees. Property in the region developed into mega stores, such as the 20.000-square-foot showroom Louis Vuitton shops danthe Virgin Atlantic, where it is their biggest store in the whole of Europe.

5. Via Montenapoleone (Milan)

Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 983
Price in 2007: not available
Milan is the fashion capital of Italy, and the Via Montenapoleone is the path that offers the best shopping centers. All that you imagine-from Gucci and Louis Vuitton to Prada and Salvatore Ferragamo, can be found here.

6. Via Condotti (Rome)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 909
Price in 2007: not available
Key to the retail price is stagnant. Wherever there is a place that many tourists seem to come together is where the discovery of the most expensive retail property. It makes the Via Condotti, near the Spanish Steps, is a place for fine shops. The road that never told a few writers like Lord Byron, John Keats and Percy Shelley was now transformed into a luxury retail outlets barang2 like Valentino and Hermes.

7. East 57th Street (New York City)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 900
Price in 2007: $ 900
East 57th Street are among the most strategic place for retailers in New York, the Madison Avenue and Fifth Avenue. Visitors staying at the Four Seasons-one of the most expensive hotel in Manhattan-where if they want to spend, enough just to set foot on their doorstep. Many options are available, starting from Tiffany & Co.. corner of Fifth and move down to Tourneau at the end of Madison.

8. Grafton Street (Dublin)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 824
Price in 2007: $ 668
Irish economic growth led to increased consumer spending. When some Irish use the euro for a holiday to New York, most of the other-as other foreign visitors to Grafton Street, located in downtown Dublin to Trinity College. However, slowing growth in Ireland again and some banking issues, slightly inhibited the growth of the economy in this way for next year.

9. New Bond Street (London)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 810
Price in 2007: $ 813
New Bond Street, an extension of the "old" Bond Street in West End, is one example of first suburbs. But now, this road is one of the most expensive property in the world. Slowing British economy from recession, resulting in a decline-but only slightly.


10. Ginza (Tokyo)


Price-per-square foot, per year: $ 794
Price in 2007: $ 683
The Ginza District is a mixture of cultural revivalism baroq Japan, ultra-modern design, modern corporate buildings such as the Sony Building and Georgian buildings of Europe. Consumer confidence is the question in 2009. Although the Japanese people experienced a recession, Japan still saving people is usually very much during hard times.

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