Bangkok Post

LVMH targets tourists with revamp of La Samaritain­e

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PARIS: Luxury goods group LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE aims to grab a greater slice of tourist spending in Paris as of next April when it relaunches La Samaritain­e, a 150-yearold department store that will house a hotel and shops and rival the likes of Galeries Lafayette.

Spending by visitors to France remains a major source of income for high-end brands, even if Chinese shoppers, the industry’s number one clientele, are starting to buy more at home, encouraged by import duty cuts among other incentives.

LVMH, behind fashion and accessorie­s labels like Louis Vuitton, makes 8% of its sales in France alone, and already owns upmarket Parisian department store Le Bon Marche.

Its latest venture, with 20,000 square metres of shopping space, will sit on the banks of the Seine, close to tourist magnets like Notre-Dame Cathedral.

La Samaritain­e is famed for its 1920-era building and gilded Art Deco facade but the revamped store will include a 100-metre airport-style moving walkway through a tunnel to nearby parking.

“The environmen­t in Paris is very competitiv­e, we had to differenti­ate ourselves,” Eleonore de Boysson, the Europe and Middle East head of DFS Group said in a presentati­on on Tuesday.

DFS is a retail and airport duty-free group which is majority-owned by LVMH and primarily present in Asia, including Hong Kong, where operations have been hit by street protests.

Facing competitio­n from online retailers, department stores are reinventin­g themselves as daytrip destinatio­ns.

La Samaritain­e, which expects just under five million visitors in its first year, will rival peers like Qatari-controlled Printemps and family-owned Galeries Lafayette. Some 37 million shoppers visit the latter’s main store in Paris every year.

LVMH, which first snapped up a stake in La Samaritain­e in 2001, said it had spent €750 million ($830.70 million) on its makeover, which includes a contempora­ry, wavy glass exterior on one side by Japanese architectu­ral duo SANAA.

The store had to shut its doors in 2005 as its original glass flooring was not sufficient­ly fire-resistant.

Operators expects half of shoppers to be made up of tourists from overseas and other parts of France, who will account for a majority of revenue.

The complex will include a luxury rooftop hotel and be home to 96 flats under a social housing scheme.

 ?? PHOTOS BY REUTERS ?? LEFT
A general view shows the hall and the staircase with Art Nouveau decoration inside La Samaritain­e, which is set to reopen next April after a 15-year renovation.
PHOTOS BY REUTERS LEFT A general view shows the hall and the staircase with Art Nouveau decoration inside La Samaritain­e, which is set to reopen next April after a 15-year renovation.
 ??  ?? BELOW
A scale model of La Samaritain­e, a 150-year-old department store that will house a hotel and shops.
BELOW A scale model of La Samaritain­e, a 150-year-old department store that will house a hotel and shops.

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