De Bijenkorf Explained

Type:Private
Genre:Department stores
Location:Amsterdam, Netherlands
Products:Clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, house wares
Parent:Selfridges Group

(in Dutch; Flemish pronounced as /də ˈbɛi.ə(ŋ)kɔr(ə)f/; literally, "the beehive"[1]) is a chain of high-end department stores in the Netherlands, with its flagship store on Dam Square in Amsterdam. The chain is owned by Selfridges Group, owner also of Britain's Selfridges and Ireland's Brown Thomas and Arnotts.

It has been a member of the International Association of Department Stores from 1929 to 2012,[2] with various CEOs acting as presidents of the Association over time.[3] [4]

History

De Bijenkorf was founded in 1870 by Simon Philip Goudsmit (1845-1889), starting as a small haberdashery shop at 132 Nieuwendijk, one of Amsterdam's oldest streets and to this day a main shopping street. Initially limited to yarn and ribbons, and employing a staff of four, the stock expanded gradually. After the death of Goudsmit in 1889, Goudsmit's widow expanded the business with the help of a cousin, Arthur Isaac, and her son Alfred, eventually buying adjacent buildings.

In 1909, these connecting shops were replaced by a new building. That same year, a temporary building was erected on the site of the demolished Beurs van Zocher, and construction of a new store started beside it.

In 1926, a second store was built in The Hague, designed by Piet Kramer, a notable example of Amsterdam School architecture.

A third store opened in Rotterdam in 1930, designed by renowned architect Willem Dudok. Some 700,000 people attended the opening festivities.

Toll of German occupation

The Rotterdam store was heavily damaged in the German bombing of Rotterdam of 1940 after Nazi Germany invaded (and preceded the occupation of the country 1940-1945), which resulted in the near-total destruction of the city's historic centre. The intact part of the store remained open for business until 1957, but was cleared in 1960 to build the Rotterdam Metro. A new store was designed by Hungarian-American architect Marcel Breuer (1902–1981).

After the invasion, the authorities confiscated the shares of the Jewish owners and German company Riensch & Held took them over.[5] In November 1943, German businessman was placed on the Board as Wehrwirtschaftsführer.[6] Of the 5000 employees in May 1940 around 1000 were of Jewish origin and of those 737 were murdered by the Nazis. The owners Isaac hid and Alfred Goudsmit escaped to the United States.[7] The Jewish Dutch owners were able to reclaim their property after the liberation of 1945.[8]

Post-war

Ownership of De Bijenkorf

YearGroupRemarks
Part ofOwner
CompanyNationality
1966[9] Koninklijke Bijenkorf Beheer (KBB)(nl)Dutch -->
1999 Vendex KBB NV[10] Dutch Merger of KBB and Vroom en Dreesman; also owned HEMA.[11]
2004 Vendex KBB NVVDXK Acquisition BV, in turn owned by KKR, AlpInvest Partners, and Change Capital PartnersAmerican,
Dutch
Maxeda paid EUR 2.4 billion for Vendex KBB, took it off the stock exchange and in 2006 merged it into Maxeda, selling HEMA for 1.3 bn euro to Lion Capital and retiring the Vendex KBB name.[12] Maxeda was owned by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR) & Co. (USA) and AlpInvest Partners (Netherlands). It owned V&D, La Place, De Bijenkorf, Hunkemöller, and MS Mode (then called M&S Mode), which is sold for a total of EUR 4 billion.
2004 Koninklijke Vendex KBB BV
2004 Vendex KBB BV
2006 Maxeda
2011Selfridges Group Ltd.[13] British Also owned Selfridges (UK), Brown Thomas and Arnott's (Ireland) Holt Renfrew and Ogilvy (Canada)
2022Selfridges Group Ltd.Central Group/Signa HoldingThai,
Austrian
Also acquired Selfridge's (4 stores), Brown Thomas (6 stores), and Arnott's. Already owned KaDeWe (Germany–Berlin), Globus (Switzerland) and La Rinascente (Italy).[14]

Stores

As of 2014, De Bijenkorf has 7 stores nationwide. The oldest and largest branches, situated in Amsterdam, The Hague and Rotterdam, have retail space ranging between 15,000 and 21,000 square meters. Smaller stores (7,500-10,000 m2 of retail space) can be found in Amstelveen, Eindhoven, Utrecht and Maastricht.

Branches in Arnhem, Groningen, Enschede, Breda and Den Bosch closed in late 2014/early 2015 as the parent group decided to focus up-market and online due to the new premium service strategy. The Arnhem building was taken over by Primark, a move seen by many Arnhemers as drastically reducing the attractiveness of Arnhem as a shopping centre.

Bijenkorf Wonen was a store format that carried home furnishings such as bath and bed linens, housewares, kitchen appliances, dishware, glassware, decorative accessories, et al.

Table of store locations

CityStreet or mallFormatOpenedClosedCurrent
tenant
style=background-color:honeydew Amsterdamstyle=background-color:honeydew Damstyle=background-color:honeydew Full-linestyle=background-color:honeydew 1870in operation
style=background-color:honeydew The Haguestyle=background-color:honeydew style=background-color:honeydew Full-linestyle=background-color:honeydew 1926style=background-color:honeydew colspan=2 in operation
style=vertical-align:top;background-color:lavenderblush Rotterdam
(1930–1957)
style=vertical-align:top;background-color:lavenderblush Van Hoogendorpplein (now Churchillplein)style=vertical-align:top;background-color:lavenderblush Full-linestyle=vertical-align:top;background-color:lavenderblush style=vertical-align:top;background-color:lavenderblush style=vertical-align:top;background-color:lavenderblush
style=vertical-align:top;background-color:honeydew Rotterdam
(1957–present)
style=vertical-align:top;background-color:honeydew Coolsingelstyle=vertical-align:top;background-color:honeydew Full-linestyle=vertical-align:top;background-color:honeydew 1957in operation
style=background-color:honeydew Eindhovenstyle=background-color:honeydew Piazza Centerstyle=background-color:honeydew Full-linestyle=background-color:honeydew 1969in operation
style=background-color:honeydew Utrechtstyle=background-color:honeydew style=background-color:honeydew Full-linestyle=background-color:honeydew 1977/87style=background-color:honeydew colspan=2 in operation
style=background-color:honeydew Amstelveenstyle=background-color:honeydew Stadshart Amstelveenstyle=background-color:honeydew Full-linestyle=background-color:honeydew 1998style=background-color:honeydew colspan=2 in operation
style=background-color:honeydew Maastrichtstyle=background-color:honeydew style=background-color:honeydew Full-linestyle=background-color:honeydew 2003in operation
style=background-color:lavenderblush Arnhemstyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Full-linestyle=background-color:lavenderblush 1975style=background-color:lavenderblush 2013style=background-color:lavenderblush Primark
style=background-color:lavenderblush Enschedestyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Full-linestyle=background-color:lavenderblush 2002style=background-color:lavenderblush 2013style=background-color:lavenderblush Primark
style=background-color:lavenderblush Bredastyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Apparelstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 2001style=background-color:lavenderblush 2016style=background-color:lavenderblush Zara
style=background-color:lavenderblush Groningenstyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Apparelstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 2001style=background-color:lavenderblush 2016style=background-color:lavenderblush Zara
style=background-color:lavenderblush Den Boschstyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Apparelstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 2001style=background-color:lavenderblush 2016style=background-color:lavenderblush
style=background-color:lavenderblush Arnhemstyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Wonenstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 1970sstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 1980sstyle=background-color:lavenderblush
style=background-color:lavenderblush Utrechtstyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Wonenstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 1977style=background-color:lavenderblush 1987style=background-color:lavenderblush
style=background-color:lavenderblush Haarlemstyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Wonenstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 1986style=background-color:lavenderblush closedstyle=background-color:lavenderblush
style=background-color:lavenderblush Venlostyle=background-color:lavenderblush style=background-color:lavenderblush Outletstyle=background-color:lavenderblush 2005style=background-color:lavenderblush 2008style=background-color:lavenderblush
style=background-color:lavenderblush Lelystadstyle=background-color:lavenderblush Batavia Stadstyle=background-color:lavenderblush Outletstyle=background-color:lavenderblush before 2006style=background-color:lavenderblush closedstyle=vertical-align:top;background-color:lavenderblush

Notes and References

  1. Book: Martin Dunford. The Rough Guide to the Netherlands. 2010. Penguin. 978-1-84836-882-8. 62–63.
  2. Web site: De Bijenkorf official website. Histoire. live. de Bijenkorf. https://web.archive.org/web/20201126124356/https://www.debijenkorf.fr/a-propos-de-bijenkorf . 2020-11-26 .
  3. Web site: IADS Presidents. 2021-04-22. www.iads.org.
  4. Web site: News releases - www.stockmanngroup.com. 2021-06-20. www.stockmanngroup.com.
  5. https://www.joodserfgoeddenhaag.nl/de-bijenkorf-2/ De oorlogsjaren ("The War Years"), Joods Erfgoed Den Haag ("The Hague Jewish Heritage")
  6. Christoph Kreutzmüller, Händler und Handlungsgehilfen : der Finanzplatz Amsterdam und die deutschen Großbanken (1918–1945). Steiner, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-515-08639-0.
  7. https://www.joodserfgoeddenhaag.nl/de-bijenkorf-2/ De oorlogsjaren ("The war years"), Joods Erfgoed Den Haag ("The Hague Jewish Heritage")
  8. https://www.joodserfgoeddenhaag.nl/de-bijenkorf-2/ Herstel na de Tweede Wereldoorlog ("Re-establishment after the Second World War"), Joods Erfgoed Den Haag ("The Hague Jewish Heritage")
  9. Web site: Inventarissen: 929 Archief van de Koninklijke Bijenkorf Beheer N.V. en rechtsvoorgangers. Archive of KBB and Predecessors . Archief Amsterdam (Amsterdam Municipal Archives) . 8 January 2024 . nl . 2009.
  10. News: Vendex toys with FAO Schwarz sale - Apr. 14, 1999 . 8 January 2024 . money.cnn.com . 14 April 1999.
  11. News: Distressed debt funds take an interest in Maxeda . 8 January 2024 . RetailDetail EU . 19 May 2016.
  12. News: Dutch Maxeda sells Hema retail chain to Lion Capital . 8 January 2024 . Reuters . 9 August 2007.
  13. News: Maxeda concludes strategic review of Fashion Group - Permira . 8 January 2024 . yumpu.com . Maxeda . 31 January 2011 . en.
  14. News: Acquisition of parent company de Bijenkorf completed. Overname moederbedrijf de Bijenkorf afgerond - RetailTrends . 8 January 2024 . RetailTrends . 19 August 2022 . nl.