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As of Mar 29
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Harbour City Mall changing real estate landscape

Centrally located on Montego Bay’s heavily used Howard Cooke Boulevard, Harbour City Mall is making a name for itself as an entertainment venue for when the sun goes down.

BC
By Charmaine N Clarke Executive Editor, Regional Correspondents Network
via By Charmaine N Clarke Executive Editor, Regional Correspondents Network

Centrally located on Montego Bay’s heavily used Howard Cooke Boulevard, Harbour City Mall is making a name for itself as an entertainment venue for when the sun goes down.

By Charmaine

N CLARKE Executive editor, regionalcorrespondents networkclarkec@jamaicaobserver.com March 29, 2026 Harbour City Mall changingreal estate landscape TWO years after opening its doors in the heart of Montego Bay, Harbour City Mall is changing the face of real estate development and property use in the western city. A massive investment in renewable energy is an indication of the developers’ commitment to the location.

Harbour City Mall changing  real estate landscape
“The solar installation is a good example of how we think about this space. What Caribbean Solar Life put in place here is, to our knowledge, the largest solar installation at any commercial centre in St James — 2,000 panels delivering 1.3MW hours of power, with a 200-panel system as part of the set-up. That scale of investment in renewable energy at a commercial property is not common on the island, and it says something about the long-term thinking behind how Harbour City was built and how we intend to run it,” Harbour City Mall CEO Shifu Huang said in written replies to the Jamaica Observer’s Real Estate on the Rock.

It is also unusual in that its one-acre plaza — heavy with pedestrian traffic as customers visit shops during the daytime — doubles as an open-air, centrally located entertainment venue when the sun goes down. From 7:00 pm to midnight, the plaza now hosts Sunday Souls, a mix of soul-stirring music served up by a rotation of popular DJs.

“The organisers approached Harbour City with the concept, and it was a good fit from the start. They wanted a setting that felt clean, relaxed, and accessible, somewhere people could enjoy quality entertainment without the usual hassle. The plaza made sense.

It’s open, well-lit, secure, and the [availability of] parking takes away one of the biggest complaints people have about going out in Montego Bay,” said Huang. Almost 400 parking spaces were built as part of the development — a two-storey area above the mall itself provides 220 spaces while another 150 were put in next door. The use of the plaza as an entertainment venue is groundbreaking, as major night-time events are not typically held at Montego Bay’s big malls, leaving them deserted for much of each 24-hour cycle.

According to Huang, filling this gap is exactly what they were going for when the US$10-million Harbour City Mall was constructed.

“We built the plaza with this kind of use in mind — the infrastructure and the permits are already in place. We’ve hosted [events as part of the week-long] Reggae Sumfest before, so large-scale events are not new territory for us. The space works because it holds a crowd without losing the feel of an intimate experience.

We’re open to the right partnerships and expect more of them as the space matures,” he said. The availability of the venue augers well for the country’s entertainment sector, which has for years been hobbled by a scarcity of suitable locations. On January 27, while providing an update on activities planned for Reggae Month, Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport Olivia Grange indicated that she would soon announce some of the areas that are to be designated as entertainment zones.

And speaking during a press conference at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston earlier this month, she noted that Government intends to maximise on readily available infrastructure across the island to propel the profitability of the entertainment industry.

“I think that the more coordinated we are — and certainly the government infrastructure, both at the local government level and central government level — the more we will better be able to create an enabling environment for the entertainment sector,” said the minister. Harbour City Mall is located within a section of Montego Bay’s waterfront — from Freeport to the Hip Strip — earmarked for transformation, and entertainment is part of the plans.
“This breathtaking stretch of Caribbean coastline will be unified into one seamless, world-class leisure, entertainment, and shopping corridor,” Prime Minister Dr Andrew Holness said in his recent contribution to the 2026/27 Budget Debate. Huang and his team are convinced their venue has a lot to offer in that regard.

“Montego Bay is growing, and we’re positioning Harbour City to keep pace,” the CEO told the Sunday Observer.

“Harbour City is a commercial property, but the ambition behind it goes further than that. Commerce, culture, and community all have a place here,” Huang added. An aerial view of Harbour City Mall showing the top floor of its two-storey roof parking lot, plus additional parking to the right.

HUANG…we’re open to the right partnerships and expect more of them as the space matures A section of the plaza at Harbour City Mall that is transformed into an entertainment venue at night.

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