ParknShop
Type | Supermarket |
---|---|
Industry | Retailing |
Founded | 1973 |
Headquarters | Hong Kong |
Number of locations | 260 stores (2013) |
Area served |
Hong Kong <br/ >Mainland China Macao |
Owner(s) | A.S. Watson Group |
Parent | Hutchison Whampoa Limited |
Website | http://www.parknshop.com/ |
PARKnSHOP (Chinese: 百佳; pinyin: Bǎijiā; Cantonese Yale: Baak Gāai) is one of the two largest supermarket chains in Hong Kong, the other being Wellcome. PARKnSHOP operates more than 260 outlets in Hong Kong, Macao, and Mainland China.
The first PARKnSHOP store opened in Stanley, Hong Kong in 1973. For a decade the store remained a local retailer until the mid-1980s when it began to expand outside Hong Kong. The PARKnSHOP concept mimics the larger supermarket layout found in North America. It sells both Chinese merchandise and imported goods.
PARKnSHOP is a member of the A.S. Watson Group, a wholly owned subsidiary of Hutchison Whampoa Limited.
Locations
Hong Kong
PARKnSHOP has more than 200 stores and 9,000 employees in Hong Kong.[1] PARKnSHOP opened the first Superstore[fn 1] in Hong Kong in 1996 in Whampoa Garden[2] Phase 12 with a floor space of 4,200 m². The first ParknShop Megastore[fn 2] opened in 2002 in Metro City Tseung Kwan O with a floor space of 6,700 m².
A.S. Watson Group also operates a number of supermarkets under different brand names that target higher-income consumers. There is one Great supermarket located at Pacific Place, one Gourmet supermarket at Leighton Centre (Causeway Bay), and Taste supermarkets at Festival Walk (Kowloon Tong), Citygate (Tung Chung), Stanley Plaza (Stanley), Hopewell Centre (Wan Chai), East Point City (Hang Hau, Tseung Kwan O), Maritime Square (Tsing Yi), Olympian City 2 (Tai Kok Tsui), Metroplaza (Kwai Fong, Kwai Chung) and TMTplaza (Tuen Mun). In 2007, another brand, International by PARKnSHOP, was introduced at Happy Valley, Hong Lok Yuen, United Centre at Admiralty and Cyberport which specializes in organic foods.
PARKnSHOP's higher-income stores are billed as a "lifestyle" food stores and stock a large variety of imported goods, as well as fresh fruit and vegetables and many nonfood items. The upmarket stores were launched in November 2004, when the existing 35,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) PARKnSHOP store located at Festival Walk in Kowloon Tong was rebranded as TASTE. It is open daily from 7.00am to midnight.
Mainland China
In 1984 PARKnSHOP opened its first mainland China store in Shekou, the first foreign retailer to enter the mainland Chinese market. The chain's first mainland superstore opened in 2000 and its first mainland megastore followed in 2001 in the Tianhe district of Guangzhou. There are now about 60 PARKnSHOP stores in northern and southern China, including locations in Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Dongguan.
Generic products
PARKnSHOP sells products under generic brands, both what it calls "private label"[fn 3] and "Best Buy"[fn 4] branding.
History
Labour outsourcing
In April 2005, the PARKnSHOP chain, including the rebranded TASTE superstore in Festival Walk, controversially dismissed 525 employees, when the company outsourced the labour for its fresh foods counter; most of the employees were dismissed just before the Chinese New Year in 2006. The aggrieved employees included many low-paid workers of longtime service. The employees' union complained that although 90% of the dismissed workers were rehired at the same position as before, their wages were lowered (some reportedly by as much as 44%), and their working hours were increased from 10 to 12 hours by the outsourcing subcontractor. The resulting average hourly rate was HK$18.[3]
Proposed sale by Hutchison
In 2013, Hutchison invited bids for the entire ParknShop chain, during a "a strategic review" of the ParknShop business, for an expected price of US$3 billion to US$4 billion. The company received eight bids, from: China Resources Enterprise, Wal-Mart Stores (US), Aeon (Japan), Woolworths (Australia) and Wesfarmers (Australia), CP Group (Thailand), and Sun Art Retail (China).[4] However in October the company announced that it would retain ownership of the chain and focus on expanding in China.[5]
See also
- City'super
- Wellcome Supermarkets
Notes
- ↑ Chinese: 超級廣場; pinyin: Chāojí guǎngchǎng; Cantonese Yale: Chīukāp Gwóngchèuhng
- ↑ Chinese: 購物廣場; pinyin: Gòuwù guǎngchǎng; Cantonese Yale: Kaumaht Gwóngchèuhng
- ↑ Chinese: 百佳牌; pinyin: Bǎi Jiā pái; Cantonese Yale: Baak Gāai páai
- ↑ Chinese: 超值牌; pinyin: Chāo zhí pái; Cantonese Yale: Chīu jihk páai
References
- ↑ "Company Overview". Retrieved 2007-06-30.
- ↑ PARKnSHOP milestones
- ↑ Wong, Ching (April 2006). "PARKnSHOP Outsourcing adds insult to injury". U-Beat magazine Chinese University of Hong Kong. Retrieved 2007-03-25. (Chinese)
- ↑ Eight bids received for Li Ka-shing's ParknShop, SCMP, 17 August, 2013
- ↑ RPT-Hutchison drops plan to sell ParknShop supermarkets business, Reuters. 20 Oct 2013
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to PARKnSHOP Supermarkets in Hong Kong. |
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