KaDeWe
The store is located on Tauentzienstraße, a major shopping street, between Wittenbergplatz and Breitscheidplatz, near the heart of former West Berlin. It is technically in the extreme northwest of the south Berlin neighborhood of Schöneberg.
History
Empire and Weimar Republic: the Jandorf Era
The businessman Adolf Jandorf had opened six stores for basic needs with his company A. Jandorf & Co. in Berlin by 1905. Like the competitor stores Wertheim Leipziger Strasse (1894) and the Warenhaus Tietz (1900), also on Leipziger Strasse, Jandorf wanted to cater for the high consumer desires of the Wilhelminism elite. Jandorf's seventh branch was supposed to "satisfy the spoiled demands of the top ten thousand, the top one thousand, the very top five hundred," as the weekly cultural magazine Der Roland von Berlin (Zeitschrift) wrote. With a GmbH of the same name founded especially for this purpose, in which his partner company M.J. Emden Söhne (Hamburg) held a four per cent stake, Jandorf began planning the new store in 1905 under the name Kaufhaus des Westens (KaDeWe). It was planned that the term Kaufhaus (department store) should set itself apart from the usual store and wholesaling warehouse. The abbreviation KaDeWe was used from the start and, according to a commemorative publication from 1932, was based on the abbreviation of company names that had become common in the US at the time.
The department store was built to designs by the architect Emil Schaudt . It opened on 27 March 1907 with a floor space of 24,000 sq m.
In June 1927, ownership changed to Hermann Tietz OHG, which was responsible for modernizing and expanding the store. The company wanted to add two new floors, but because of the Nazi rise to power in the 1930s these plans came to a sudden halt.
Nazi era
Hermann Tietz OHG was a Jewish-owned partnership and because of the Nazis' anti-Jewish laws the company was aryanized—that is, transferred to non-Jewish owners—and its name changed to Hertie.
During World War II, Allied bombing ruined most of the store, with one shot-down American bomber actually crashing into it in 1943. Most of the store was gutted, which caused its closure.
Postwar
The re-opening of the first two floors was celebrated in 1950. Full reconstruction of all seven floors was finished by 1956. "KaDeWe" soon became a symbol of the regained economic power of West Germany during the Wirtschaftswunder economic boom, as well as emblematic of the material prosperity of West Berlin versus that of the East.
Between 1976 and 1978, the store's floor space was expanded from 24,000 sq m to 44,000 sq m. Just after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, KaDeWe recorded a record-breaking number of people going through the store. By 1996, with a further floor and restaurant added, the sales area had expanded to 60,000 sq m.
In 1994, the KarstadtQuelle AG corporation acquired Hertie and with it, KaDeWe. Most of the floors were renovated between 2004 and 2007 in preparation for the store's one hundredth anniversary.
In January 2014, a majority stake in Karstadt Premium GmbH was acquired by the Signa Holding GmbH. In 2015, it was acquired by the Bangkok-based Central Group. Central now owns 100% of the KaDeWe Group.
KaDeWe Group
In 2015, the KaDeWe Group was established, consisting of KaDeWe, Alsterhaus in Hamburg, and Oberpollinger in Munich. The KaDeWe Group is jointly owned by the Central Group, a Thailand-based international department store conglomerate and Signa Holding. Until 2024, Signa wholly owned the KaDeWe building, leasing it back to the business.
In 2022, the KaDeWe Group announced plans to expand to Vienna, Austria with Lamarr, named after Hedy Lamarr. and Carsch-Haus in Düsseldorf.
The KaDeWe Group filed for bankruptcy on 29 January 2024, due to significantly rising rents demanded by Signa on the Berlin building.
The Central Group bought the KaDeWe building on April 12, 2024 from the insolvent Signa, for 1 billion Euros, and announced they were in talks to acquire Signa's interest in the KaDeWe Group. Central officially purchased 100% of the KaDeWe Group (KaDeWe, Alsterhaus and Oberpollinger) later in the year.
Features
KaDeWe has eight floors, each focused on a different type of merchandise.
The ground floor is for beauty accessories and luxury goods. The services offered include beauty salons as well as nail and foot spas.
The so-called "Luxury Boulevard" is also situated here, with various luxury brands.
The 1st floor for is men's apparel.
The 2nd floor is devoted to women's fashion.
The 3rd floor is referred to as "the Loft" and is Germany's biggest luxury shoe department. Women's leather goods and lingerie are also sold here.
The 4th floor contains interior and design items, as well as the in-house wedding and gift registry services.
The 5th floor is for arts, books, entertainment, electronics, toys, office supplies, and souvenirs.
The 6th and 7th floors are entirely devoted to food, and are advertised as having two football fields of food. The 6th floor food hall is called "Delicatessen" and is famous for its wide variety of food and beverages. It has around 110 cooks and 40 bakers and confectioners, supplying more than 30 gourmet counters. The top floor (added in the early 1990s) includes a winter garden with a 1000-seat restaurant surrounded by an all-windowed wall offering a view over the Wittenbergplatz.
Media
In 2021 KaDeWe: Our Time Is Now, a six-part TV mini-series set in and around the store, was produced in Germany, based on the somewhat fictionalised lives of Harry Jandorf (son of the store's founder), Georg Karg (the store's manager), together with two completely fictional characters, Fritzi Jandorf (daughter of the store's founder) and Hedi (a store worker), set between the end of World War I and the aryanisation of the store as the Nazis came to power. The series was shown in BBC4's Saturday night "foreign language" slot in mid-2022, subtitled in English.
Bibliography
- Antonia Meiners: 100 Jahre KaDeWe. Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, Berlin 2007, 168 p., 80 colour photos, 80 b&w photos, clothbound, ISBN 978-3-89479-386-9, summary in german
- Nils Busch-Petersen: Adolf Jandorf – Vom Volkswarenhaus zum KaDeWe, Hentrich & Hentrich, Berlin 2007, 80 p., ISBN 978-3-938485-10-1
- KaDeWe: Colourful western goods. In: Sites of Unity (Haus der Geschichte), 2023.
References
- ^ KaDeWe Archived 2012-03-05 at the Wayback Machine, City of Berlin
- ^ "The Attack on Berlin Department Stores (Warenhaeuser) After 1933" (PDF). yadvashem.org.
- ^ [1] Archived 2017-06-24 at the Wayback Machine, KaDeWe Berlin company Web site
- ^ "Central Department Store Group (CDG)". Central Group. Archived from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2017.
- ^ Conti, Samantha (2024-08-01). "Central Group Takes Full Control of KaDeWe Stores in Germany, Names Timo Weber CEO". WWD. Retrieved 2024-08-08.
- ^ "The KaDeWe Group (Alsterhaus, KaDeWe, Oberpollinger)". IGDS. Retrieved 2023-08-03.
- ^ "The KaDeWe Group Chooses Centric Retail Planning to Streamline Processes". PRWeb. Retrieved 2023-08-03.
- ^ "Central Department Store Group (CDG)". Central Group. Archived from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2017.
- ^ https://www.ft.com/content/830ca0df-b3a8-4a67-afa0-35818e818ec9
- ^ Dong, Irene (2022-11-09). "Central Group unveils Lamarr luxury department store planned for Vienna". Inside Retail. Retrieved 2023-08-03.
- ^ "Germany: KaDeWe department store group files for bankruptcy – DW – 01/29/2024". Deutsche Welle.
- ^ https://www.reuters.com/markets/deals/thailands-central-group-buys-kadewe-property-say-industry-sources-2024-04-12/
- ^ Vena, Teresa (2021-08-26). "Shooting of the series Eldorado KaDeWe by Julia von Heinz starts in Berlin and Budapest". Cineuropa. Retrieved 2022-12-02.
External links
- KaDeWe - Kaufhaus des Westens in Berlin, (English)
- Europe's Biggest Department Store featuring history of KaDeWe, berlin-life.com
- „Seventh Heaven“, Christophorus, No. 326, The Porsche Magazine, June/July 2007, p. 66 - 74.
- „Not heaven, but not hell either“, signandsight.com, December 22, 2005 by Roger Boyes
- Fare Of The Country; In One Berlin Store, Food Without End, New York Times, March 10, 1991