Upscale Shin Kong Place No Longer Shin Kong Place

If you've paid a recent visit to Shin Kong Place, one of Beijing's toniest shopping malls, you may have noticed a subtle change: the name “Shin Kong Place” is now completey absent.

Rest assured you're not going crazy: the name has been changed and the mall is now known merely as Beijing SKP because the Taiwan-based co-developer has withdrawn from the joint venture and taken the old name with them.

The high-end shopping center was developed in 2006 by partners Beijing Hualian Investment Group and Shin Kong Mitsukoshi Department Store Co. from Taiwan. It quickly established itself as a top-notch destination for luxury goods, with outlets that included Chanel, Prada, Mikimoto, and Marc Jacobs.

The mall's revenue grew at an astounding 30 percent annual rate between 2008 and 2011, and in 2011 it became the most lucrative shopping complex in Beijing, netting RMB 6.5 billion in revenues.

Rumors as far back as 2008 cited conflicts between the two joint venture partners. In 2013, Shin Kong finally quit the venture, taking with them their trademarks “Shin Kong Place” and the Chinese xinguang tiandi (新光天地).

While the breakup took place more than a year ago, the name change was not enforced until recently. Inside, the shopping center looks pretty much the same as usual.

The Shin Kong Group, meanwhile, has just started construction on a new Shin Kong Place, this time in partnership with Yuan Yang Real Estate. The new mall is under construction near the East Sixth Ring Road in Tongzhou. No estimated opening date has been released.

Shoppers at Beijing SKP asked by reporters from Beijing Community Daily claimed they had not even noticed the name change. Some found the new name, Beijing SKP, to be odd.

SKP is an acronym for “Shin Kong Place”, but with that gone, the S, K and P no longer stand for anything. Even more odd is that the mall has not designated a Chinese equivalent for "SKP." This is particularly challenging because the sounds for the letters "S" and "K" (unlike letters such as P, T, B or D) have no direct phonetic equivalent in Mandarin Chinese.

No Chinese for "SKP" is presented anywhere in the mall's on-site signage, nor on its website or its social media account on Weibo.

A call to the shopping center to ask its Chinese name resulted in this exchange (translated from the Chinese):

the Beijinger: Hi, what's the Chinese name for this mall?

SKP: There is no Chinese name. It's just "Beijing SKP."

the Beijinger: What if I don't know how to pronounce that? Is there another way to address the place?

SKP: No. It's just Beijing SKP.

An anonymous hotline operator working for the mall told Beijing Community Daily that 50 kuai would be deducted from their salary each time they accidentally used the old names.

The new Shin Kong Place in Tongzhou is rumored to be on a larger scale and even fancier than the old one, and will be located on the Beijing Subway's Line 6, which was finished last year.

Image: Beijing SKP

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Yawn. "SOHO" doesn't have a Chinese name either. "The Village" didn't have a Chinese name for years either, and now that it does, taxi drivers don't know it anyway.