Shopping malls are economic buildings in Tropico 4. Shopping malls are used to sell luxury goods, which are essential in keeping an advanced, first world population happy; citizens have a hidden need for them, similar to their needs for healthcare and food. Unfortunately, Tropico can't manufacture luxury goods itself; it needs to import them from China, which is often very expensive. Having good relations with China can help lower the cost.
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| - Shopping mall
- Shopping Mall
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| - Shopping malls are economic buildings in Tropico 4. Shopping malls are used to sell luxury goods, which are essential in keeping an advanced, first world population happy; citizens have a hidden need for them, similar to their needs for healthcare and food. Unfortunately, Tropico can't manufacture luxury goods itself; it needs to import them from China, which is often very expensive. Having good relations with China can help lower the cost.
- The city-sized JMC mining spaceship Red Dwarf had its own shopping mall. It was in the shopping mall that Dave Lister, the last human in the galaxy, came wondering around after coming out of three million years worth of stasis; Lister then passed out. The hologram Arnold Rimmer found Lister here, alive but unconscious. (Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers)
- In 2000, Henry Janeway called the Millennium Gate "a glorified shopping mall." Later, he remarked, "You don't sacrifice history for a shopping mall." (VOY: "11:59") Farpoint Station also had a mall. In 2364, William T. Riker expressed his desire to visit it when he happened upon Beverly Crusher and Wesley Crusher, who were shopping at the station. (TNG: "Encounter at Farpoint" ) In the final draft script of TOS: "Court Martial" , Starbase 11 was also referred to as having a mall.
- It also contains a movie pod and an advertisement board outside.
- A shopping mall is a building, or set of buildings, forming a complex of shops, with interconnecting walkways allowing customers to easily move from a shop to another. Merchandise sold at malls usually included clothing, computer hardware/software, viewscreens and other communications equipment, tools and technology as well as other items that were frequently used by both civilians and military personnel. They usually comprised food courts, where customers could purchase foods and beverages, and sometimes entertainment venues, like a holodeck theater, were included. (Star Trek: The Stoneship Files: "At the Soapbox Races")
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| - A huge one-level strip mall!
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| - Shopping malls are economic buildings in Tropico 4. Shopping malls are used to sell luxury goods, which are essential in keeping an advanced, first world population happy; citizens have a hidden need for them, similar to their needs for healthcare and food. Unfortunately, Tropico can't manufacture luxury goods itself; it needs to import them from China, which is often very expensive. Having good relations with China can help lower the cost.
- The city-sized JMC mining spaceship Red Dwarf had its own shopping mall. It was in the shopping mall that Dave Lister, the last human in the galaxy, came wondering around after coming out of three million years worth of stasis; Lister then passed out. The hologram Arnold Rimmer found Lister here, alive but unconscious. (Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers)
- In 2000, Henry Janeway called the Millennium Gate "a glorified shopping mall." Later, he remarked, "You don't sacrifice history for a shopping mall." (VOY: "11:59") Farpoint Station also had a mall. In 2364, William T. Riker expressed his desire to visit it when he happened upon Beverly Crusher and Wesley Crusher, who were shopping at the station. (TNG: "Encounter at Farpoint" ) In the final draft script of TOS: "Court Martial" , Starbase 11 was also referred to as having a mall.
- It also contains a movie pod and an advertisement board outside.
- A shopping mall is a building, or set of buildings, forming a complex of shops, with interconnecting walkways allowing customers to easily move from a shop to another. Merchandise sold at malls usually included clothing, computer hardware/software, viewscreens and other communications equipment, tools and technology as well as other items that were frequently used by both civilians and military personnel. They usually comprised food courts, where customers could purchase foods and beverages, and sometimes entertainment venues, like a holodeck theater, were included. (Star Trek: The Stoneship Files: "At the Soapbox Races")
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