Mesa Redonda, Lima
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Mesa Redonda is a
shopping centre A shopping center (American English) or shopping centre (Commonwealth English), also called a shopping complex, shopping arcade, shopping plaza or galleria, is a group of shops built together, sometimes under one roof. The first known collec ...
in the neighbourhood of Barrios Altos, part of the historic centre of Lima, Peru. The area is surrounded by Huanta and Jirón Cuzco, Cuzco streets, as well as Abancay Avenue, Abancay and Avenida Nicolás de Piérola, Nicolás de Piérola avenues. Known for its informality, its the site of a number of Conflagration, fires, notably Mesa Redonda fire, that of 2001.


History

The area is mainly related to the wholesale pyrotechnics industry and festive events, including the businesses near the street of the same name and its surroundings Jirón Cuzco, Cuzco, Andahuaylas and Puno, in part of the pre-Hispanic canal of Huatica, considered Cultural heritage of Peru, Cultural Heritage of the Nation. It occupies an area of around 90 thousand Square metre, m2 and is home to around nine thousand merchants, fifteen thousand in 2012, who are found in hundreds of stores among the 163 galleries or small shopping centres. Initially, as reported by El Comercio (Peru), El Comercio in the 1950s, Mesa Redonda was an area for street food sales. The place was modernised in the 1980s with the urban expansion of Lima, and during the mandate of Mayor Alberto Andrade it housed several merchants. Since 1994 the original gallery has been owned by Ricardo Wong and operated jointly by the Chamber of Entrepreneurs and Merchants of Mesa Redonda. Next to the Mercado Central de Lima, central market, it is one of the well-known commercial areas in the centre of Lima that concentrates the popular market. Around 200,000 visit the gallery every day, with records of 700,000 buyers on the night before Christmas Eve in 2015, and around a million on the last day of 2017. A Global Research Marketing survey in 2014 indicates that one in every four respondents would buy school supplies in this area. In 2019 the estimated daily revenue was US$20 million.


Incidents

The place is infamous for being a repeat offender of Conflagration, fires in the city, a product of the invasion of Hawker (trade), informal commerce, including the formation of clandestine warehouses and their expansion in the narrow street that hinders their evacuation. Between 1991 and 2010, eight fires of considerable magnitude were recorded, including Mesa Redonda fire, the one that occurred in 2001 with more than 270 deaths in total. Meanwhile, between 2014 and 2016, the majority of city fire reports were made in this area. In 2021, a small fire was recorded again. In 2003 it had 11 Fire hydrant, hydrants in case of a possible fire threat within its so-called "critical zone." In 2023, the commercial area was declared a rigid zone by the Municipality of Lima to prevent street sales and parking. In that year, measures were taken to mitigate quota collection mafias while Christmas shopping was carried out.


See also

*Mercado Central de Lima *Jirón Gamarra


References

Shopping malls in Lima Barrios Altos {{improve categories, date=January 2024