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Santiago City Guide - Shopping



Tours in Santiago

Chile's new affluence has led many European and North American clothing chains to open stores in Santiago. It is a bustling centre of commerce with the facilities to match, and foreign residents do not have to live without modern conveniences. The main shopping areas are the Paseo Ahumada, in the downtown district, and the stretch of Avenida Providencia between Metro Pedro de Valdivia and Metro Tobalaba. These offer a wide range of shops and department stores, such as the homegrown Ripley and Almacenes Paris chains.

Chile was a late discoverer of the American-style mall and several such complexes sprang up around Santiago in the 1990s. The most central of these is the Mall del Centro, Calle Puente 689, in the downtown area. Arguably the best is the Parque Arauco centre, Avenida Presidente Kennedy 5413, in the eastern Las Condes district. This vast mall allows well-heeled Santiaguinos (Santiago residents) to indulge their increasingly extravagant tastes in imported luxuries.

The most popular purchases among foreign visitors are Chilean handicrafts, such as traditional textiles and decorative copperware, which are available all over the city. You will also find a large lapis lazuli craft selection (lapis lazuli is a semi-precious stone, found only in Chile and Afghanistan).

There is a large handicraft market, the Centro Artesanal Santa Lucía, Avenida Bernardo O'Higgins (Alameda), opposite Cerro Santa Lucía. The Feria Artesanal Pio Nono, on Calle Pío Nono, in Bellavista, is another flea market selling traditional art. Perhaps the best bargains are to be had in the handicraft emporiums on Santo Domingo, inexplicably ignored by most foreign visitors. Haggling at these markets is possible but hard work for negligible reductions.

View Our Airport Guides for Santiago:

     (Santiago) Arturo Merino Benítez International Airport





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