SM Megamall
SM Megamall, formerly known as SM Megamall Ortigas and colloquially known as Megamall, is a shopping mall located in Ortigas Center, Mandaluyong, Philippines, developed and operated by SM Prime Holdings. Opened in 1991, it is the third SM Supermall, after SM North EDSA and SM City Sta. Mesa. It is the third largest shopping mall in the Philippines and one of the largest malls in the world. The mall occupies a land area of approximately and has a total floor area of. The mall has a maximum capacity of 4 million people attracting over 350,000 shoppers on weekdays and over 500,000 shoppers on weekends.
History
through First Asia Realty loaned ₱1 billion from the Philippine National Bank and Citibank, an unprecedented amount at the time, in April 1989 to fund the development of SM Megamall. The mall began construction in 1989 and opened its doors on June 28, 1991. It was the third SM Supermall built after SM City Sta. Mesa and SM North EDSA. SM Megamall was the largest mall in the country for a 17-year period, but when the SM Mall of Asia opened in 2006, it was ranked third largest in the country by floor area at that time, measuring of total retail floor area and after SM City North EDSA. It also boasted the first ice skating rink, which was temporarily removed in 2009 but was replaced by the new skating rink at a new location in 2014, as well as one of the first trade halls, the Megatrade Hall, in the country. The new skating rink was the venue for the speed skating and figure skating at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games.Since its inception in 1991, SM Megamall expanded with the addition of the Mega Atrium in 2008, Building C in 2011 and the Mega Fashion Hall in 2014, bringing the total retail floor area to. In 2018, SM partnered with Cal-Comp Technology Inc. for the provision of its New Era AI Robotic service robots stationed at SM Megamall by the first quarter of 2019.
Location
The mall is located in the Ortigas Center, one of Metro Manila's premier central business districts and shopping hubs, at the portion encompassed by Mandaluyong City. It stands along the main EDSA thoroughfare and Julia Vargas Avenue. The mall is almost adjacent to the Ortigas MRT-3 station and EDSA Carousel's Ortigas station, as well as the Shaw Boulevard MRT-3 station. The mall is also located to nearby malls such as the Robinsons Galleria, St. Francis Square, The Podium, the Shangri-La Plaza, and Starmall EDSA Shaw and landmarks such as the Asian Development Bank Headquarters, Saint Pedro Poveda College, University of Asia and the Pacific, BDO Corporate Center, The Podium West Tower and the San Miguel Corporation Headquarters.Facilities
Main Mall
The mall has two main buildings. Building A features the 12 digital cinemas on the third floor; a food court, events hall and the Toy Kingdom on the lower ground floor; art stores on the fifth floor; and other anchor tenants. It also features Forever 21 located on the second level of Building A. On the other hand, Building B features SM Store, the Ace Hardware store on the lower ground floor, the Cyberzone on the fourth floor, the Megatrade Hall on the fifth floor, and other anchor tenants. It has been expanded and has direct connections with the Mega Fashion Hall which opened on January 28, 2014. The SM Supermarket is featured on both buildings. The bridgeway connecting the two main buildings of the mall contains several restaurants.Mega Atrium
The Mega Atrium is an addition to the existing two buildings. The Atrium, completed in 2008, bridges the gap between Buildings A and B. It features Chapel of the Eucharistic Lord, a Roman Catholic chapel located on the fifth floor, as well as various shops and restaurants. The atrium also features the Garden at Mega Atrium, an indoor garden located within the second floor, and also includes the Respira Café, a coffee and pastry shop offering European confectionaries.Building C
Building C is a 11-storey mixed-use building that houses office spaces on the upper levels from the eight floor to the eleventh floor, which are entirely occupied by Concentrix; carpark spaces from the building's second level to the sixth level; and a transport terminal at the ground level, which includes an integrated bus terminal for point-to-point buses plying Batangas and Alabang and minibuses plying Binangonan, respectively. The terminal was previously served by city buses plying EDSA prior to the introduction of EDSA Busway system in 2020. Formerly Building A's open-parking facility, it is located near EDSA to the west of Building A and was opened on October 11, 2011. The building also contains the DFA CO NCR-East, the first passport office of the Department of Foreign Affairs in Metro Manila which opened in August 2012.Mega Fashion Hall (Building D)
The Mega Fashion Hall features a two-level basement parking and a five-level mall with of retail, it houses several global clothing retailers, an events hall, and additional restaurants and shops, including the three-level H&M store and the three-level Uniqlo which extends to the two uppermost levels of Building B. Aside from clothing stores, the expansion includes dining establishments, houseware stores, service shops, and a bingo area on the fifth level. The Mega Fashion Hall also houses an IMAX Digital theater, a 56-seat Director's Club Cinema with butler service, an Olympic-sized ice skating rink, an upscale food court, and a 14-lane bowling center, the SM Bowling Center . The fashion hall also features the BTS Pop-Up Store, located at the mall's third floor, and showcases over 400 BTS-branded products.Time Sculpture
The Time Sculpture is a sculpture located fronting the Mega Fashion Hall. The sculpture was unveiled on August 2, 2021, and is designed by Filipino-American public artist Jefre Manuel Figueras, also known as JEFRË, and was made of stainless steel. The sculpture is part of the Baks "Box" Series, where he gives representation to people living in cities around the world, and resembles a man looking at his watch, which serves as reminder how time is important in our lives and to make use of time in traffic productively. JEFRË also converted the statue's head to a block, which connects the figures to surrounding urban architecture, and strengthens the image that people are a city's major component as the building blocks and the bloodline of the city.Expansion
After the soft opening of Building C in 2011, the mall surpassed SM Mall of Asia by and became the second largest shopping mall in the country.With the opening of the Mega Fashion Hall, the current gross leasable area is, allowing the mall to reclaim the title of the largest mall in the Philippines.
The addition of the Mega Fashion Hall building added 125 new retail stores, 90% of which are global brands and 10% of which are local retailers.
In an announcement made by SM Supermalls President Steven Tan in June 2024, SM Supermalls announced that SM Megamall would begin its redevelopment in July 2024, ultimately adding up to of leasable space and 1,000 parking lots. Parts of Building A have been demolished to make way for the new redevelopment. The project is designed by Benoy, an international architectural firm that designed the Jewel Changi Airport in Singapore and the Iconsiam in Bangkok, Thailand, and will also include modernized interiors and exteriors inspired from a "country of a thousand islands" concept with "Crystal Islands" inspired interiors, a modernized food court and cinemas, and a rooftop sky garden with al-fresco dining spaces, seating spaces, and an ETFE roofing system at the mall's fifth floor, which allows natural light to enter the building. The construction started in 2026, and will finish it by the 2030s.
Mega Tower
A 50-storey office tower, named The Mega Tower, is located next to the Mega Fashion Hall in an area formerly occupied by an open carpark. The S-shaped tower is directly connected to the Mega Fashion Hall and features three levels of basement parking. Mega Tower has a leasable area of. Groundbreaking began in March 2016, while the tower's construction phase began six months later on the same year, in September 2016. The tower was topped off in March 2020, and was opened in 2021 with Australian BPO signing as a major foundation tenant in 2022. The administration offices of the mall are located in the tower, after giving way for the mall's redevelopment.Arquitectonica is the firm responsible for the architectural design, while Aurecon serves as the tower's structural engineer consultant and New Golden City Builders serve as the general contractor for the project.
Incidents and accidents
Mega A and Mega B
- On May 21, 2000, a bomb exploded inside a restroom at the mall's Cinema 6, located on the third floor. One person was killed and dozens were injured. Two of the victims sustained very serious injuries. The bombing occurred four days after the Glorietta 2 bombing, which wounded 13 people.
- On January 26, 2013, a holdup and shootout occurred when the Martilyo Gang, a local criminal group specializing in robbing stores by smashing and stealing valuables using hammers, robbed a jewelry store in the department store on the first floor.
- On May 5, 2013, an explosion briefly caused panic at the food court at Building A, with at least one reported hurt in a stampede before shoppers were able to calm down after learning the sounds were not gunshots. A siomai steamer was short-circuited and caused people to file out at around 7:25 PM.
- On February 14, 2016, a woman jumped to her death from the fifth floor of Building B of the mall upon learning that her female partner was entertaining a suitor. She was rushed to The Medical City Ortigas, where she was declared dead on arrival.
- On October 23, 2016, a college student jumped to her death from the fifth floor of Building B of the mall after being reprimanded by her relatives for posting a video on social media of herself kissing her underage girlfriend. She was rushed to The Medical City Ortigas but was declared dead on arrival.
- On June 5, 2022, a hit and run incident happened at the intersection of Julia Vargas Avenue and Bank Drive located behind the mall when a Toyota RAV4 driver ran over and severely injured a security guard directing traffic, then fled the scene. Three weeks later, the driver publicly apologized at a press conference arranged by the Philippine National Police at Camp Crame. The Land Transportation Office permanently revoked the driver's license and charges of frustrated murder were filed against him in the Mandaluyong City Trial Court.