Apple retail: Istanbul store to open April 5, Vancouver store to expand in 2015

Posted:
in General Discussion edited April 2014
The first official Apple retail store in Turkey is set to open its doors next Saturday in Istanbul, while one of Apple's outlets in Vancouver, British Columbia will reportedly be moving to a 'substantially' larger space in the fall of 2015.




Apple has chosen Istanbul's Zorlu Center as the host for its first retail store in the ancient city, according to Turkish blog Webrazzi. The grand opening will take place at 10 a.m. local time next Saturday.

Though this will be Turkey's first brick-and-mortar Apple store, the company opened its online store in the pan-continental nation last October. Apple CEO Tim Cook met with Turkish president Abdullah G?l in February, and the parties are believed to have discussed possible R&D investments alongside tax incentives and localization of Apple's Siri virtual assistant, the iOS implementation of a Turkish keyboard and increasing local App Store content.




Meanwhile, 6,000 miles away, Apple is said to be planning to expand its Pacific Centre shop in Vancouver, British Columbia. The company will move to a location adjacent to a new Nordstrom outlet in the mall, according to Retail Insider.

There is no word on how large the space will be, but the current Pacific Centre store runs 5,400 square feet and the new location is believed to be "substantially larger." The publication notes that the shop sold "in excess of $75 million last year," nearly $14,000 per square foot.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 24
    Maybe they'll move to the old Quiksilver location on Granville Street?
  • Reply 2 of 24
    danielswdanielsw Posts: 906member
    Turkey has a fascinating culture. I'm very excited for them with the first Apple Store of their own.

    With their apparent sincerity and enthusiasm with Apple products and services as signaled by the President's visit to Cupertino, we should be hearing a lot more good news in the not-too-distant future.
  • Reply 3 of 24
    Not exactly the best location for most people in Istanbul, but hopefully this will just the first of many.
  • Reply 4 of 24
    mstonemstone Posts: 11,510member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by DanielSW View Post



    Turkey has a fascinating culture. I'm very excited for them with the first Apple Store of their own.



    With their apparent sincerity and enthusiasm with Apple products and services as signaled by the President's visit to Cupertino, we should be hearing a lot more good news in the not-too-distant future.

    Yes, but the political standoff currently afflicting the country could become worse with the pending elections and demonstrations in Istanbul this weekend. Their government's blocking of Twitter and YouTube could tend to dampen the sprits of the otherwise exciting event of an Apple Store opening. Turkey might become the next Ukraine.

  • Reply 5 of 24
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    Istanbul? Not Constantinople?

    [SIZE=0](Someone had to do it)[/SIZE]
  • Reply 6 of 24
    fred1fred1 Posts: 1,112member
    I guess Erdogan isn't planning to block iCloud any time soon (not until after Tim leaves anyway) like he did with Twitter and YouTube. That's good news for lovers of free speech.
  • Reply 7 of 24
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    fred1 wrote: »
    I guess Erdogan isn't planning to block iCloud any time soon (not until after Tim leaves anyway) like he did with Twitter and YouTube. That's good news for lovers of free speech.
    Yup. He apparently got caught talking about payoffs in return for "friendly police and judges", access to government contracts, and various other schemes? It's a little late to try shutting down the conversation about it as the video and audio are pretty widespread already.

    That was followed up of course with Turkish leaders plotting a false flag operation as an excuse to invade Syria and the recording of the meeting making it to YouTube.
  • Reply 8 of 24
    mstonemstone Posts: 11,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SolipsismX View Post



    Istanbul? Not Constantinople?

    That was the old Apple Store.

     

  • Reply 9 of 24
    maecvsmaecvs Posts: 129member

    It will be nice for the Pac Center store will be expanded, or in this case moved. It was the original Apple store in BC, but the store is  just so small.  

     

    Now, if we can only get a store on the North Shore in the Park Royal mall's massive expansion.....

  • Reply 10 of 24
    dasanman69dasanman69 Posts: 13,002member
    solipsismx wrote: »
    Istanbul? Not Constantinople?

    (Someone had to do it)

    Damn you beat me to it. Arrggghhh!
  • Reply 12 of 24
    dasanman69dasanman69 Posts: 13,002member
    danielsw wrote: »
    Turkey has a fascinating culture. I'm very excited for them with the first Apple Store of their own.

    With their apparent sincerity and enthusiasm with Apple products and services as signaled by the President's visit to Cupertino, we should be hearing a lot more good news in the not-too-distant future.

    iPads for succulent lamb kabobs is a good trade. ;)
  • Reply 13 of 24
    solipsismx wrote: »
    Istanbul? Not Constantinople?

    (Someone had to do it)
    Istanbul since 1453
  • Reply 14 of 24
    flaneurflaneur Posts: 4,526member
    Every single time Turkey comes up you guys gotta show off your ethnocentrism. Even though Turkey has towns older than Jericho, a temple complex that is the oldest so far discovered (c.10,000BCE), the center of origin of agriculture, one of the world's greatest cuisines, and so on.

    Xenophobia is too restrictive. How about xenignosis to describe what you suffer from?
  • Reply 15 of 24

    The larger Pacific Centre Apple store will be nice but they should really open a store here in Kelowna. At least it could service the interior of BC. Kelowna has the highest per capita millionaires in Canada. I'm sure they'd sell a few products here ;)

  • Reply 16 of 24
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    flaneur wrote: »
    Every single time Turkey comes up you guys gotta show off your ethnocentrism. Even though Turkey has towns older than Jericho, a temple complex that is the oldest so far discovered (c.10,000BCE), the center of origin of agriculture, one of the world's greatest cuisines, and so on.

    Xenophobia is too restrictive. How about xenignosis to describe what you suffer from?

    I fail to see a single ethnocentric comment in this thread.
  • Reply 17 of 24
    flaneurflaneur Posts: 4,526member
    solipsismx wrote: »
    I fail to see a single ethnocentric comment in this thread.

    What's with the Constantinople remark?

    Mostly I was referring to the picture of the woman in the scarf, weighing the apples with an ancient oh-so-primitive scale. Har de har har.

    Maybe ethnocentric isn't' the right word. Jingoistic? Boorish? You choose one.
  • Reply 18 of 24
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    flaneur wrote: »
    What's with the Constantinople remark?

    Mostly I was referring to the picture of the woman in the scarf, weighing the apples with an ancient oh-so-primitive scale. Har de har har.

    Maybe ethnocentric isn't' the right word. Jingoistic? Boorish? You choose one.

    1) Istanbul used to be name Constantinople, just as Mumbai was Bombay, New York was New Amsterdam, St. Petersburg was Leningrad was St. Petersburg, and countless other cities whose names have changed throughout recorded history, but I only know of one that was immortalized in a catchy song from the 1950's that was remade in 1990 by the band They Might Be Giants.

    2) First of all, counterweight scales are not only still in use to a massive degree but are more accurate than other scale types. Secondly, her apples are in a plastic bag which means she's clearly not primitive. Finally, Constantinople was changed to Istanbul in 1930 after a tremendous run of over 1600 years.. That was nearly a half-century before Apple Computer was founded and almost 3/4 of a century before the first Apple Store was opened.

    3) Why don't you choose one. I am quite curious how any comment or photograph here in any way showed extreme patriotism against Turkey, aggressive, warlike policies toward Turkey, bad-manners toward Turks, or an intense or irrational dislike or fear toward people of Turkey. In fact, I'd say the only irrationity are your comments about our comments that in no way disparaged, belittled, or denigrated the people of Turkey, Istanbul, not or Constantinople.

    jingoism |?jiNGg??iz?m|
    nounchiefly derogatory
    Extreme patriotism, esp. in the form of aggressive or warlike foreign policy.

    boorish |?bo?oriSH|
    adjective
    Rough and bad-mannered; coarse.

    xenophobia |?z?n??f?b??, ?zen?-|
    noun
    Intense or irrational dislike or fear of people from other countries.



    edit: I take that back¡ Her use of the scale is primitive because our entire system of using an international prototype kilogram stored in a Paris vault is primitive. Now should I get upset with you by assuming you meant that every way in which we measure mass are primitive?¡ This is primitive because it's losing mass and it's because it's a physical object. We need a more precise and unwavering unit by which to determine mass and the answer may lie with atomic weights but we don't yet have equipment to measure a very specific number of atoms.
  • Reply 19 of 24
    flaneurflaneur Posts: 4,526member
    solipsismx wrote: »

    3) Why don't you choose one. I am quite curious how any comment or photograph here in any way showed extreme patriotism against Turkey, aggressive, warlike policies toward Turkey, bad-manners toward Turks, or an intense or irrational dislike or fear toward people of Turkey. In fact, I'd say the only irrationity are your comments about our comments that in no way disparaged, belittled, or denigrated the people of Turkey, Istanbul, not or Constantinople.

    Maybe just settle on bad manners, with aggravated circumstances caused by lack of visiting the civilization in question. Doing so would show how inappropriate the picture is.

    For the rest, check out this thread from last year, including a gratuitous insult about getting paid in advance, and even a post from jragosta, not insulting:

    http://forums.appleinsider.com/t/157607/prime-minister-visits-apple-hq-as-turkey-ponders-10-6m-tablet-buy-for-education
  • Reply 20 of 24
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    flaneur wrote: »
    Maybe just settle on bad manners, with aggravated circumstances caused by lack of visiting the civilization in question. Doing so would show how inappropriate the picture is.

    For the rest, check out this thread from last year, including a gratuitous insult about getting paid in advance, and even a post from jragosta, not insulting:

    http://forums.appleinsider.com/t/157607/prime-minister-visits-apple-hq-as-turkey-ponders-10-6m-tablet-buy-for-education

    1) I've been to Turkey and if you're going to Turkey you might as well go to Istanbul or you're missing out.

    2) I'm still not seeing where anyone's comments here, in any way, are how you describe the country, city and/or the culture. Have you never seen a woman selling Apples? I've probably seen apples being sold in every country I've been to so I don't understand why you'd go after [@]mstone[/@] for mentioning how the "old" apple store. Note that the context clearly infers 1930 or earlier.

    3) You've now shown that you get overly defensive about Turkey. I agree that a comment about being paid in advance implies that the purchaser isn't trustworthy but I didn't see anything in [@]SpamSandwich[/@]'s comment that in anyway refers to the Turkish people. This is where I would ask questions to get specifics. Maybe he specifically doesn't like and/or trust the Prime Minister, or maybe he doesn't trust governments at all, or maybe he's basing this on their GDP, or something else entirely, but you seem to be assuming it's because he is Turksih and therefore not to be trusted. We can rule out that possibility without more info but it's certainly not the factual, anti-Turkish remark you make it out to be. It's like if you were to say that you don't like a particular rap song and then I jumped on you for being racist. That might be the case, but that's a very, very big leap to make on the given data.
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