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Printemps

 
 
Paris: Where to Shop: Department Stores: Le Printemps

<< Bon Marché || Galeries Lafayette >>

64 Boulevard Haussmann, 9th, M° Havre-Caumartin, ☎ 01 42 82 50 00, www.printemps.com. Open Monday through Saturday, 9:35am to 7pm (Thursday until 10pm). Printemps Haussmann is one of the city’s largest department stores, spread out over three buildings (Homme, Mode and Beauté & Maison). Their revamped beauty department, opened in November 2003, is supposedly the largest in the world. The best time to visit is weekday mornings, otherwise be prepared for massive crowds. Free fashion shows are held every Tuesday at 10am for the international clientele. If power shopping isn’t your thing, head to the top floor of the Beauté & Maison building for fantastic panoramic views.

<< Bon Marché || Galeries Lafayette >>

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Wikipedia: Printemps
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Grand Magasin Printemps on Boulevard Haussmann

Printemps (meaning the season "spring" in French; French pronunciation: [pʁɛ̃tɑ̃]) is a French department store (or a grand magasin, literally "big store").

The flagship Printemps store is located on Boulevard Haussmann in the IXe arrondissement of Paris along with other famous department stores like Galeries Lafayette.

There are also other Printemps stores in Paris and throughout France. The store has also opened branches outside France, in locations including Andorra, the Ginza shopping district in Tokyo and Jeddah. The store in Seoul which opened in 1988 is closed.

The only North American branch was a franchised location in Denver, Colorado, at the Broadway Plaza Shopping Center, which opened in 1987. It is now closed.

Printemps used to be owned by the PPR group, the parent company of Gucci and FNAC.

History

Printemps was founded in Paris in 1865 by Jules Jaluzot, in a building designed by Paul Sédille, rebuilt in its current form by Paul Sédille in 1883. The figures of the Four Seasons on the facade were sculpted by French sculptor Henri Chapu.

Jaluzot was replaced as owner in 1900 by Gustave Laguionie, after the business came close to collapse. The building was then extended along the Boulevard Haussmann by architect Rene Binet in the early twentieth century in an art nouveau style. This building burnt down, and its interior was rebuilt in the 1920s.

A remarkable feature of the Haussmann store is an elaborate stained-glass cupola above the main restaurant in the store, installed for the 1923 rebuilding. In 1939, to avoid the risk that it would be destroyed in bombing attacks, the cupola was dismantled and stored at Clichy. It was restored in 1973 by the grandson of its original designer, using plans that had been kept in the archives of the family business. In 1975, the façade and cupola of the building were registered as historical monuments.

Part of the cupola above the tearoom of the Boulevard Haussmann Printemps store

External links

Coordinates: 48°52′27″N 2°19′42″E / 48.8740761°N 2.3284686°E / 48.8740761; 2.3284686


 
 

 

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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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Printemps" Read more