This is a list of department stores. In the case of department store groups the location of the flagship store is given. This list does not include large specialist stores, which sometimes resemble department stores.

Note: "trading" is British English for "in operation".

Africa

Botswana

Ghana

Defunct:

Kenya

Nigeria

South Africa

Tanzania

Tunisia

Zimbabwe

North America

Canada

Currently trading:

  • Canadian Tire – auto repair garage, hardware, home renovations, sports, garden centre, electronics, auto parts, furniture, food, housewares, towels; franchised stores with independent owners
  • Costco – Canadian unit of US-based chain; warehouse superstore, food, electronics, furniture, clothing, car repair
  • Fields – discount chain owned by FHC Holdings Ltd.; the chain was purchased by Hudson's Bay Company in 1981 but broke away in 2012
  • Giant Tiger - discount grocery chain with stores in most Canadian provinces.
  • Hart - Department store chain founded in 1960. Stores located across Quebec, Ontario and New Brunswick.
  • Holt Renfrew – high-end department store chain
  • Hudson's Bay – department store owned by Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). Formerly called The Bay
  • The North West Company – retail, primarily northern and smaller towns
  • Real Canadian Superstore - chain of grocery stores that also carry electronics, fashion, household items, and have in-store services such as pharmacies, wine shops, GoodLife Fitness or Fit4Less locations and Mobil gas stations. Located in five provinces in Canada.
  • Saks Fifth Avenue – high-end department store
  • Simons – Department store founded in 1840. Stores in Québec, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia.
  • Taylor's – Quebec department store
  • Walmart Canada – part of US multinational Walmart
  • Winners/Homesense/Marshalls – part of US company TJX Companies
  • Zellers – discount retailer chain, now functioning as a pop-up in Hudson's Bay stores.

Defunct:

  • Adilman's Department Store – Saskatoon, SK (1921–1974)
  • A.L. Green - chain of department stores. Merged with Greenberg Stores about 1980.
  • Army & Navy Stores
  • Ayre and Sons – Newfoundland-based department store chain; once operated as many as 80 stores coast-to-coast (1859–1991)
  • Biway – discount store based in Ontario, defunct in 2001
  • The Bon Marché – independent discount variety store in St. John's, Newfoundland 1919–1971
  • Bowring BrothersSt. John's, NL, department store, also national home decor store chain 1811–2019
  • Bretton's – high-end department store, 1985–1996
  • Caban – Club Monaco's Home Store, 2000–2006
  • Caplan's – Ottawa, Ontario department store; founded in 1897, closed in 1984
  • Consumers Distributing – Canadian catalogue discount retailer (formerly Consumers Distributing Ltd., 1957 to 1996)
  • Dupuis Frères – Montreal department store, founded by Nazaire Dupuis (1870), closed 1978
  • Eaton's – went bankrupt in 1999; acquired by Sears Canada; defunct in 2002; as with the closure of Woodward's a decade earlier (see below), the vacancies left by Eaton's stores sparked a number of major shopping mall renovations and reconfigurations across the country
  • Freimans – longtime Ottawa retailer, acquired by the Bay in 1972
  • Home Outfitters – home goods store, subsidiary of Hudsons Bay Company, 1999–2019
  • Horizon – discount department store operated by Eaton's, 1967–1978
  • Kmart Canada – discount department store, usually in the suburbs, created by S.S. Kresge  sold Canadian stores to Hudson's Bay Company in 1997; many of these stores closed outright; the few that remained were converted to HBC's Zellers banner
  • Laliberté – Quebec City department store, founded in 1867, closed 2020[1][2]
  • Larocque's Department Store 1923–1971 Ottawa, Ontario; constructed in 1923 to cater to the Francophone community of Lowertown; William Noffke made additions to the space in 1930; Management and ownership taken over by Joe Vineberg 1931 with relatives Harry and Sol Goodman of New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. Closed circa 1970–1971; now the Mercury Court Building, housing offices of Barry Padolsky Associates Inc. and shops. Barry Padolsky Associates Inc. renovated and expanded the space from 1989 to 1993. Features include a Mercury weathervane by the American sculptor W. H. Mullen, which was rescued from the Sun Life Building, demolished in 1949. The building was included amongst other architecturally interesting and historically significant buildings in Doors Open Ottawa, 2012.[3]
  • Goodman Department Store- New Glasgow-Antigonish-Truro in Nova Scotia-Ottawa-Montreal. Established in 1904 by Harry Goodman, his brother Sol Goodman and the Vineburg Family under the name Vineburg Goodman & Co. Goodman's was northern Nova Scotia's first and largest department store with 34 departments. The Ottawa store operated under the name of Larocque noted above. Goodman Co. closed in Antigonish, New Glasgow and Truro in 1984–1985. The stores were redeveloped shopping centres in Antigonish by developer Brian MacLeod and in New Glasgow the largest store by Brian MacLeod, and lawyers Richard Goodman Q.C. (grandson of former owner) and Gregory MacDonald Q.C.
  • LW Stores – furniture, hardware, home, grocery, health & beauty, clothing liquidation retailer
  • Marks & Spencer – British retailer's Canadian stores first opened 1973 and closed 1999
  • Metropolitan – discount department store chain (1908–1997); sister chain of SAAN Stores and Greenberg Stores, later converted to the SAAN name
  • Miracle Mart – discount grocery store operated by Steinberg's, defunct 1992; some outlets of the spinoff grocery chain, Miracle Food Mart, were acquired by Dominion Stores
  • Morgan's – merged with Hudson's Bay Company
  • Murphy-Gamble – Ottawa store, acquired by Simpson's
  • Nordstrom – (2014-2023)
  • Ogilvy's (Charles Ogilvy Limited) – Ottawa-area chain, merged with Robinson's in the 1980s, defunct 1990s
  • Ogilvy's – Montreal department store, founded by James A. Ogilvy (1866), merged with Holt-Renfrew (2019)
  • Compagnie Paquet – Quebec City department store; founded in 1850; merged with Syndicat de Québec in the 1970s, closed in 1981[1]
  • Peoples – 1914–1995; discount store closed at the same time as its parent company Wise Stores; not to be confused with the Canadian jewelry store chain
  • Pollack – Quebec City department store; two stores in Quebec City and one in Montreal; operated from 1915 to 1978
  • Prange & PrangewayH. C. Prange Co.; opened in 1887; chain was acquired by Younkers in the autumn of 1992
  • S&R Department Store – discount store in Kingston (1959–2009)[4] and Belleville.
  • S.S. Kresge – smaller, downtown locations
  • SAAN Stores – discount stores (1947–2008); most of chain's locations and SAAN name bought on asset basis by The Bargain! Shop
  • Sam's Club – opened 2005 and expanded to 6 locations; closed in 2009
  • Sayvette – discount department store, defunct 1970s
  • Sears Canada – Canadian unit of Sears (1984–2018)
  • Sentry – Ontario chain of retail department stores; various locations from Sarnia to Kingston; founded in 1961[5] by Samuel Joseph Lipson (August 15, 1911 – November 12, 2006).[6] A discount department store with the slogan "Sentry – Guards your dollar",[7] this small regional chain closed in the early 1980s.[8]
  • Shop-Rite – catalogue store operated by Hudson's Bay Company, 1970s-1982
  • Simpson's – acquired by the Hudson's Bay Company and closed 1991; name now owned by Sears Canada 2001–2008; now owned by 1373639 Alberta Ltd, a Sears Canada shell company
  • Simpsons-Sears Limited – name retired and renamed Sears Canada Inc.; 1952–1984
  • Spencer's – Western Canada, bought by Eaton's
  • Syndicat de Quebec – Quebec City department store; founded in 1867; closed in 1981[1]
  • Target – Newfoundland discount variety store chain (1981–1995); never related to the American company
  • Target Canada – part of US giant Target Corporation (2013–2015)
  • Towers Department Stores/BoniMart – sold to Zellers in 1990 and name retired in 1991, with closure of final stores
  • Wise Stores – similar to Hart Stores
  • Woodward's – Western Canada; defunct 1993; most stores converted to Zellers, Walmart, and The Bay; its closure sparked a wave of major renovations and reconfigurations in malls across Canada between 1993 and the early 2000s
  • Woolco – discount department store, usually in the suburbs, acquired by Wal-Mart in 1994
  • Woolworth's – closed Canadian stores in 1994, though some became Woolco (such as the Whitehorse outlet); others that did not close outright were reconfigured and rebranded as The Bargain! Shop
  • XS Cargo – discount retailer chain dealing in clearance items; defunct 2014
  • Yaohan – single location in Vancouver of Japanese chain in the late 1990s
  • Zellers – discount retailer chain (1931–2020), store leases purchased by Target Canada in 2011, with brand name replaced & stores changed to Target in 2013. The last two stores using the Zellers name, were closed in 2020. In spring 2023 HBC re-opened some Zellers stores within select Hudson's Bay Stores

El Salvador

  • Sears
  • Siman – Central American department store chain with locations in Nicaragua, Guatemala, and Costa Rica

Defunct:

  • Sanborns – branch of Mexican department store chain closed in 2020.
  • Carrion (2003-2019)

Mexico

  • C&A
  • Liverpool – biggest department store chain in Mexico
  • El Palacio de Hierro – high-end department store
  • Sanborns – division of Carso Comercial, nationwide, famous for their coffee-shop-style restaurant, bars, and compact merchandise areas selling limited selections of giftable merchandise, pharmacy, newsstand, and cosmetics.
  • Sears Mexico – division of Carso Comercial
  • Suburbia

Defunct

Puerto Rico

Defunct:

  • González Padín - high-end department store chain, founded in 1884, biggest and oldest local department store on the island until closure in 1995 due to economic problems.
  • Es de Velasco - high-end department store chain, founded in 1939, acquired by competitor González Padín in 1991, closed in 1995.
  • New York Department Stores - department store chain, founded in 1931, acquired in 1994 by the Melville Corp., most stores turned to Marshalls or closed.
  • Pitusa - discount department store chain, founded in 1976, downsized due to economic problems and ultimately closed last stores in 2014 after bankruptcy.
  • Topeka - discount department store chain, founded in 1967, downsized due to economic problems ultimately closing in the 2010s.
  • Kmart - national department store chain, established on the island in 1964 at the San Patricio Plaza shopping mall, closed last store in 2022 located at the Plaza Las Américas shopping mall.
  • Barkers - discount department store chain, established on the island in 1962,[13] ultimately closed in 1984.

United States

South America

Argentina

Defunct:

Bolivia

Brazil

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Chile

Currently trading:

Defunct:

  • J. C. Penney – two stores in Santiago area (one in Alto Las Condes as a full-store, one in Parque Arauco as an only-furniture store); closed because of poor sales in 1999; converted to Almacenes París and Casa&Ideas stores.
  • Gala-Sears – five stores (one full store and four minor stores) in Santiago area; Chilean division of Sears; closed because of poor sales in 1983; converted to Falabella.
  • Muricy – two stores in Santiago area; closed because of bankruptcy in 1990; converted to Almacenes París.

Supermarkets and discount stores:

  • Jumbo – supermarket chain, belongs to the Cencosud Group
  • Líder – supermarket chain, belongs to the D&S Company, a Walmart joint venture

Colombia

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Ecuador

  • Almacenes Tía
  • Almacenes De Prati[14] – department store and retail business; clothing, shoes, accessories, cosmetics, and home goods
  • Comandato[15]

Paraguay

Peru

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Supermarkets and discount stores

Uruguay

Defunct:

Venezuela

Currently trading:

Defunct:

  • Sears - sold to Organización Cisneros in 1984, rebranded to Maxy's until it became defunct in 1995.

Supermarkets and discount stores

Asia

Brunei

Cambodia

China

Defunct:

  • Seiyu – sold to Beijing Hualian Group
  • Wing On – after civil war in 1949, the store's business moved outside China to Hong Kong; its properties and asset in China were nationalized under the Communist system
  • Yaohan

Hong Kong

Currently trading:

Defunct:

India

Indonesia

Currently trading:

  • Foreign department store brands:
    • ÆON – Jakarta, Tangerang, Bogor
    • Galeries Lafayette – Jakarta
    • Lotte – Jakarta
    • LuLu – Jakarta, Tangerang
    • M&S – Jakarta, Tangerang, Bandung, Surabaya, Bali, Medan
    • Metro – Jakarta, Bandung, Surabaya, Makassar, Solo
    • Sogo – Jakarta, Tangerang, Surabaya, Bali, Medan, Samarinda
    • Seibu – Jakarta
  • Local department store brands:
    • Citrus – Bogor, Jakarta, Semarang
    • Lima Cahaya – Kalimantan
    • Matahari – nationwide
    • Ramayana – nationwide
    • Robinson – nationwide
    • Cahaya – nationwide
    • Sarinah – Jakarta
    • Surya – Papua
    • Transmart – nationwide
    • Yogya - Java

Defunct

Israel

Japan

Laos

Lebanon

Currently trading:

Defunct

Macau

Defunct:

Malaysia

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Pakistan

  • Imtiaz Super Market
  • Makro
  • Metro
  • Naheed Super Market
  • Chase up
  • Chase Value
  • Hydri Super Market
  • Family Super Store & Pharmacy
  • Bin Hashim Super Market
  • Spar Super Market
  • Spring Super Market
  • Kifayah Super Market
  • Bin Safeer Super Market
  • Al Jadeed Super Market
  • Needz Super Market

Philippines

Saudi Arabia

Singapore

Currently trading:

  • Beijing Hualian Group – formerly known as Seiyu Group (Bugis Junction, Lot 1, The Clementi Mall, Jurong Point, Junction 8)
  • Isetan (Shaw House and Centre, Tampines Mall, Parkway Parade, NEX)
  • Metro (Paragon, Causeway Point)
  • Mustafa (Little India)
  • Robinson & Co.
    • Marks & Spencer – franchise (313@Somerset, Jewel Changi Airport, Marina Square, One Raffles Place, Paragon, Plaza Singapura, Parkway Parade Vivocity, Waterway Point, Wheelock Place)
  • Takashimaya (Ngee Ann City)
  • Tangs (Tang Plaza - Orchard Road, VivoCity)
  • OG (Chinatown, Bugis, Orchard Road)

Defunct:

South Korea

  • AK Plaza – five branches throughout the country, Main shop in Guro, SW Seoul and Bundang new city and Suwon & Pyeongtaek station shop, A AeKyung group company
  • Galleria Department Store – six or five branches throughout South Korea, because EAST and WEST are considered one store in Gangnam, Southern Seoul, Main department store in Daejeon & Cheninan, Chungnam area. A Hanwha group subsidiary.
  • Happy World (Haengbokhan Sesang) Department Store – Yangcheon-gu, Mokdong, Seoul
  • Hyundai Department Store – 15 branches throughout the country main brand in Gangnam Apgujeong dong & Gangnam coex shop, Pangyo new city & Kintex shop at NE Seoul exhibition center
  • Lotte Department Store – more than 30 branches throughout the country, including three Young Plazas and one Avenuel at jamsil 123-storey skyscraper mall complex, 8 overseas branches in Russia, Moscow, China, Vietnam, Hanoi, and Indonesia, Jakarta The top department stores with Lotte hotel complex.
  • M Department Store – Chuncheon, Gangwon-do
  • NC Department Store - Part of E-land group company, it has 19 branches throughout the nation including Seoul Garden 5 mall, Southern Seoul along with Hyudnai city mall.
  • Say Department Store – Seo-gu, Daejeon
  • Shinsegae Department Store – 13 branches throughout the country including Myeongdong shop and starfield mall in Hanam SE Seoul & Goyang, Northern Seoul.
  • Taepyung Department Store – Dongjak-gu, Seoul

Defunct:

Sri Lanka

Currently trading:

Taiwan

Thailand

Currently trading:

Defunct:

United Arab Emirates

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Vietnam

Europe

Albania

Austria

Belgium

  • Galeria Inno – part of the German GALERIA Holding GmbH (Galeria Kaufhof)

Bulgaria

  • TZUM- dismantled in the 1990s. Several modern malls function in Sofia, Varna, Bourgas, etc.

Czech Republic

Cyprus

Denmark

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Estonia

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Finland

Currently trading:

Defunct:

  • Anttila
  • Pukeva

France

Defunct:

Germany

Currently trading:

  • Alsterhaus – located in Hamburg, part of the KaDeWe Group
  • Apropos – luxury department store / concept store, located in Cologne, Düsseldorf and Hamburg
  • Breuninger – ten luxury department stores, with head office in Stuttgart
  • Galeria Kaufhof – subsidiary of HBC and the leading German department store group
  • Galeries Lafayette Berlin – Berlin branch of the French department store, will close end of 2024
  • Hema – Dutch group operating 6 department stores in Germany
  • KaDeWe – located in Berlin, part of the KaDeWe Group
  • Ludwig Beck – luxury department store, founded in 1861, located in Munich
  • Müller – not really a department store, more a large chemists that sells additional goods such as housewares, multi-media, toys
  • Oberpollinger – located in Munich, part of the KaDeWe Group
  • Peek & Cloppenburg fashion / clothing store (not really a department store)
  • Woolworth – German branch of the Woolworth group, independent from the international Woolworth group, now German owned by the Tengelmann Group

Defunct:

Greece

Currently trading:

  • Attica Department Stores, Attica at Golden Hall
  • Fokas Department Stores (closed)
  • Hondos Center – mainly cosmetics
  • Notos Galleries

Hungary

Iceland

Ireland

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Foreign-Operated:

Italy

Defunct:

  • Gamma – acquired by Standa in 1973
  • JCPenney – acquired by Rinascente in 1977
  • Mas – department store in Rome, closed in 2017
  • Standa – acquired by Gruppo Coin in 1998

Latvia

Lithuania

  • Akropolis
  • CUP
  • Europa
  • Gedimino 9
  • Ozas
  • Panorama
  • Maxima
  • Lidl

Luxembourg

Defunct:

  • Monopol – sold its assets

Netherlands

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Norway

Poland

Portugal

Currently trading:

Defunct:

  • Grandella (Lisbon)
  • Grandes Armazens do Chiado (Lisbon and branches)
  • Marks & Spencer

Romania

Russia

Currently trading:

Serbia

Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Currently trading:

Defunct:

  • Almacenes Al Pelayo (Oviedo)
  • Almacenes Arias – closed in 1997
  • Almacenes Botas (Oviedo and Gijón)
  • Almacenes Madrid-París
  • Almacenes Simeón – closed in 1987
  • Galerías Preciados – taken over by El Corte Inglés in 1996
  • Marks & Spencer – closed in 1996
  • Sears – taken over by Galerías Preciados in 1983
  • SEPU – the Australian owners closed the remaining four branches in 2002

Sweden

Currently trading:

Defunct:

Switzerland

  • Coop City
  • GlobusZürich, Bern, Luzern, Sursee, Walisellen, Locarno, Dietlikon, Marin, Basel, Chur, St. Gallen, Lausanne and Genève
  • Jelmoli – one flagship store located in Zürich
  • Loeb (Swiss department store) (Bern and branches) – Biel, Thun and Schönbühl
  • Manor (Basel and branches) – used to operate under different brands like Nordmann, Vilan, Rheinbrücke, Placette and Innovazione
  • Migros – the largest supermarket chain, but acting as a department store in different shopping centers

Defunct:

  • ABM (Au Bon Marché) – discount chain; was a part of the Globus group; closed 2001; some shops were converted to C&A stores
  • EPA (Einheitspreis AG) – discount chain; closed 2005; most stores converted to Coop City or closed down

United Kingdom

Major department stores currently trading

Turkey

Oceania

Australia

Department stores:

Discount department stores:

Defunct:

New Zealand

Department Stores:

Discount department stores:

Defunct:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Française, Encyclopédie du patrimoine culturel de l'Amérique. "Encyclopédie du patrimoine culturel de l'Amérique française – histoire, culture, religion, héritage". Ameriquefrancaise.org. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  2. "La fermeture du magasin Laliberté marquera la fin d'une époque".
  3. Dept., Parks, Recreation & Cultural Services (7 December 2017). "Doors Open Ottawa". Ottawa.ca. Retrieved 1 February 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Stuart Laidlaw (April 20, 2009). "It all started in the store's old elevator". Toronto Star.
  5. "Sentry Department Store (photo)". Windsor Star. July 20, 2010.
  6. "Obituary for Samuel Joseph Lipton". November 2006. Archived from the original on 2014-05-12. Retrieved 2012-03-17.
  7. "Sentry in Dorwin Plaza, 1967 (photo)". 20 September 2007.
  8. Peter Hendra (March 17, 2012). "Sentry broke new ground". Kingston Whig-Standard. Archived from the original on September 13, 2012.
  9. "Tiendas Capri - "En Capri nos vemos" | Shopper | Tiendas | Mucho más". Tiendas Capri. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  10. PE, FashionNetwork com. "La cadena Grand Way se expande en Puerto Rico". FashionNetwork.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  11. "Sobre Nosotros". Grand Stores (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  12. "Cronología de la caída de Sears y Kmart". El Nuevo Día (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  13. "El Mundo 1962.08.02 — Archivo digital de El Mundo". gpa.eastview.com. Retrieved 2023-12-03.
  14. "Almacenes de Prati - Tienda en Línea de Almacenes De Prati - Comprar en Almacenes De Prati". Deprati.com. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  15. "Comandato inaugura su local más grande en Ecuador". El Comercio (Ecuador) (in Spanish). November 25, 2015.
  16. "Nueva Americana".
  17. "YATA Limited | Sun Hung Kai Properties".
  18. Dutta, Vishal (2018). "Carpediem capital PE invests Rs 41.5 crore in 1-India Family Mart". The Economic Times. Retrieved 2018-07-11.
  19. "About TANGS - TANGS Singapore". Tangs.com. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
  20. "Unimoscow.com". Unimoscow.com. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
  21. "Beymen.com – The Fashion Destination Online". Beymen.com.tr. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  22. "İnternetin Boyner'i Online Alışverişin Adresi". Boyner.com.tr. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  23. "Fashion Federation". Fashfed.com. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  24. "Gani Yalçin".
  25. "Desibona.com – Online marketplace platform". Desibona.com. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  26. "Mark-ha.com – Luxury Shopping". Mark-ha.com. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  27. "Tesetturmayom.com – Modest Swimwear". Tesetturmayom.com. Retrieved 7 May 2023.

[1]

  1. HKarim Buksh, Top 10 Online Shopping Websites in Pakistan", Medium, 8 Nov 2019
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.