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La Samaritaine

 
 
Paris: Where to Shop: Department Stores: La Samaritaine

<< Department Stores || Bazar de l’Hôtel de Ville (BHV) >>

Quai du Louvre, 1st, M° Pont Neuf (direct access) or Louvre-Rivoli, ☎ 01 40 41 20 20, www.lasamaritaine.com. Open Monday through Saturday, 9:30am to 7pm (Thursday until 9pm, Saturday until 8pm). This is a medium-sized department store overlooking the Seine, with a separate building for the men’s department. It has an Art Deco exterior, Art Nouveau interior, and a popular rooftop café with great views.

<< Department Stores || Bazar de l’Hôtel de Ville (BHV) >>

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La Samaritaine

La Samaritaine as seen from the Pont Neuf
Building
Type Department store
Architectural style Art Nouveau, Art Déco
Location Paris, France
Owner LVMH
Coordinates 48°51′32″N 2°20′31.5″E / 48.85889°N 2.342083°E / 48.85889; 2.342083Coordinates: 48°51′32″N 2°20′31.5″E / 48.85889°N 2.342083°E / 48.85889; 2.342083
Construction
Inaugurated 1869
Floor area 48,000 m²
La Samaritaine at night

La Samaritaine (French pronunciation: [la samaʁitɛn]) was a large department store in Paris, France, located in the First Arrondissement. The nearest metro station is Pont-Neuf. It is currently owned by LVMH, a luxury-goods maker. Since 2005, the building has been closed for reasons of security and renovation.

History

The store was first opened in 1869 by fr:Ernest Cognacq and fr:Marie-Louise Jaÿ, his wife and incidentally the first clothing vendor at Le Bon Marché, a rival department store. Cognacq began his trade on the fr:rue de la Monnaie, starting out on a small scale with a very small boutique. By 1900, the couple had decided to expand their enterprise, giving birth to the large edifice seen today, the "Grands Magasins de La Samaritaine."

Inspired by the commercial methods of Aristide Boucicaut to those of Le Bon Marché, Ernest Cognacq drew upon various sources in organizing the ideal (and ideally managed) department store. Cognacq arranged La Samaritaine as a collection of individually owned stores, each managed by true "petits patrons" who operated in concert yet autonomously.

Through the steady acquisition of neighboring buildings, Ernest Cognacq regularly expanded what could no longer be called a "boutique." The surrounding city blocks were entirely reworked and reconstructed progressively from 1883 to 1933. (Notably, between 1903 and 1907, this work was taken on by the architect Frantz Jourdain, who applied an Art Nouveau aesthetic to the building.) Further structural changes were successfully completed in 1933 by Henri Sauvage who, in his turn, reworked the architecture to reflect the aesthetic principles of Art Déco. The result was an eleven-story department store, one that is today considered a historical monument.

Falling prey to the national deficit of the 1990s, La Samaritaine saw itself shrink: it was bought in 2001 by LVMH, the luxury-goods company that had just previously purchased Le Bon Marché. On June 15, 2005, in order to update the 19th-century building to modern standards of security, or for purposes of restructuring, as the labor unions believe, the department store was closed[1]. It is estimated that La Samaritaine will reopen its doors by the end of 2011.

The name La Samaritaine ("the Samaritan Woman") comes from a hydraulic pump installed near the Pont Neuf, which operated from 1609 to 1813. The front of the pump featured a gilded bas-relief of the Samaritan woman drawing water for Jesus at the well as described in the fourth chapter of John's Gospel.

The store is well-known for its rooftop café, which affords excellent views of the city.

References

  1. ^ BBC

External links


 
 

 

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Paris & Ile de France Adventure Guide. Paris & Ile de France. Copyright © 2004 by Heather Stimmler-Hall. All rights reserved.  Read more
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