Picture of Pacific Plaza

Historical version 24 of Pacific Plaza (view current version)

  • 020 7409 7747
  • Unit L, The Junction, Wembley Retail Park, Engineers Way, HA9 0EG (streetmap) (osm) (gmap) (bingmap) (streetview)
  • 10am-10pm Mon-Sun (some businesses close earlier) (last orders 9pm)

Reasonably-sized East and South-East Asian shopping mall and food court in Wembley very near Wembley Stadium. It's very similar to (and is touted as the replacement for) the now-closed Oriental City, and the project is in fact the brainchild of a former Oriental City tenant.

The first tenants moved in just before the end of 2009, and by mid-February 2010 the opening had progressed far enough for the centre to host a Chinese New Year celebration. In addition to the businesses mentioned below, there are plans for a supermarket, a bookshop, a clothes shop, and a martial arts hall offering classes and demonstrations. The supermarket has been fitted out since January 2010 photo, and word as of early July 2010 is that it will open "soon", but since the opening has been announced and then put off a number of times already, it remains to be seen whether this will actually happen.

As of mid-March 2010, there are six businesses trading on the ground floor:

  • 8AM Healthcare Ltd photo, offering acupuncture and Chinese medicine.
  • Doki photo — this is the Japanese crockery shop that used to trade as Utsuwa-No-Yakata in Oriental City. It's open 10am-6:30pm Mon-Sun.
  • Tetote Factory photo — a Japanese bakery open 10am-7pm Mon and Wed-Sun. It also sells hot drinks, and although there's no seating in the shop, it's fine to take your purchases upstairs and eat them in the food court.
  • A beauty salon.
  • A ceramics shop photo.
  • A tat shop photo.

As of the start of June 2010, seven of the thirteen units in the food court are open for business (more are marked as coming soon, including a fresh juice bar and an Indian vegetarian stall):

  • Spicy Thai — Thai food! menu p1, menu p2, menu p3, menu p4.
  • NP Star Snack Bar — Japanese and Malaysian, specialising in crepes, fried things, takoyaki, and fruit skewers with chocolate dip photo.
  • China House — Chinese food, roast meats, dim sum, rice, noodles, Sichuan food dim sum menu, roasted meats menu.
  • Hot Korean — Korean food photo, menu.
  • Shan — Japanese, previously Zen at Oriental City website, photo, menu p1, menu p2.
  • Nambu — Japanese donburi (rice bowl) dishes Facebook photos.
  • Seleramu — Malaysian hawker food website, menu. (An anonymous commenter tells us that Seleramu make their own rotis from scratch rather than buying them frozen.)
  • Darjeeling Momo — as of June 2010, this is only open at weekends menu photos.

According to an anonymous commenter on this page, some of the food stalls offer discounts to employees of the London Borough of Brent, on production of a valid ID badge. We haven't verified this, and we don't know which stalls offer the discounts.

Kake tried the dim sum at the China House stall in January 2010. King prawn cheung fun (£3.80) photo was OK, though the wrappers were a little thick and the prawns a decent size but unremarkable in quality (and perhaps very slightly overcooked). Pan-fried turnip cake (£2.60) photo was good, with decent, not-dried-out chunks of roast meat, obvious shreds of turnip, and a decent amount of browning on the outside. Siu mai (£2.50) photo were pretty good too, with large chunks of prawn to complement the pork, and a well-judged fat-to-meat ratio. Jasmine tea (80p) came in a 300ml polystyrene cup with the teabag still in (a commenter, dapprman, tells us that you get an actual teapot if there's more than one of you).

Kake visited again in June 2010 and tried the salmon sashimi bento box from Shan (£9.50) photo. This included one gyoza dumpling, one skewer of teriyaki chicken, a large handful of edamame, a generous helping of salmon sashimi, a leaf and cheery tomato salad, rice, and miso soup. The gyoza was freshly fried, with a nice crust on the bottom. The chicken was very tender, and its sauce nicely balanced and not too sweet. The edamame were served at room temperature, so not freshly cooked, but this was done competently and the texture didn't suffer too much. The salmon sashimi was fairly thinly sliced, and some of the pieces were a little irregular, but it seemed fresh enough. The salad was properly dressed with a well-balanced dressing. The rice was fine, neither undercooked nor mushy, and nicely presented with a sprinkling of black sesame seeds, and the miso soup had a pleasant if not particularly complex flavour.

Initially the food court also had another Thai place called Sawadee Thai (see photo of som tam with more info in the comments), but this only lasted a few months and as of June 2010 the unit where it used to be is empty and clear of all signage.

Accessibility: Step-free to get in. There's a large car park just outside (a commenter, dapprman, tells us that when they visited on a football playoff day in June 2010 there were security guards making sure that only non-football cars were allowed into the carpark). There are steps up to the food court on the first floor, but there's also a lift (go around the right-hand side of the stairs and you should see it). Toilets are on the first floor too, including a dedicated accessible toilet.

See also:

Getting here: It's about 5 minutes' walk from Wembley Park Station on the Jubilee Line. Come out of the exit signposted for Wembley Stadium, and at the bottom of the steps carry on through the underpass directly towards the stadium. Continue over one road and then turn left onto Engineer Way just under the ramps leading up to the stadium. Wembley Retail Park is a little way along on the left. Alternatively, buses 92 and P92 stop directly outside.
Last visited by Kake, 2 June 2010.
OS X co-ord: 519611 OS Y co-ord: 185900 (Latitude: 51.558806 Longitude: -0.274369)
This is version 24 (as of 2010-07-27 19:20:04). View current version. List all versions.