Wing On

Wing on Department Store
永安百貨
Industry retailing ( cosmetics, fashion, home appliances, luxury stationary, ivory craft, kitchen wares and appliances, etc)
Founded 1907
Founder Kwok Lok (郭樂) and Kwok Chuen (郭泉)
Headquarters Hong Kong
Area served
Hong Kong
Key people
Kwok Lok, Kwok Chuen
Owner Karl Kwok Chi Leung
Parent Wing on Company International Limited (Wing on Company)
Divisions Wing on Bank
Website http://www.wingonet.com

Wing On (Chinese: 永安) is a department store company in Hong Kong.

The company is owned by a Hong Kong listed company Wing on Company International Limited (SEHK: 0289), incorporated in Bermuda. The holding company of the listed company itself is Wing on International Holdings Limited, which is owned by Karl Kwok Chi Leung (郭志樑)[1] and the Kwok family.

History

The World Cinema (right) and Wing on Company (centre) on 179, Des Voeux Road, Central, c1920s–30s

Brothers Kwok Lok (郭樂) and Kwok Chuen (郭泉) started the Wing on fruit store in Australia in 1897. In 1907 Kwok Chuen returned to Hong Kong with accumulated savings and founded the Wing on Company, the second Chinese-owned department store in Hong Kong.

They later went on to found Wing on Bank.[2]

Stores in Hong Kong

Wing on Manulife Provident Funds Place in 2013.
Wing on Department Store in 2007, Sheung Wan, Hong Kong Island
Wing on Department Store in Cityplaza, closed in August 2015

It has five outlets in Hong Kong, with 360,000 square feet (33,400 square metres) of shopping space.[3] The five stores are:

The branch at the Wing on Centre was prominently featured in the climactic sequence to the 1985 Jackie Chan film Police Story.

Wing on in Shanghai

Wing on also had a branch in Shanghai. The Shanghai branch was opened in 1918 on Nanking Road (today's Nanjing Road), and was at the time one of the "big four" department stores of Shanghai. The store occupied two prominent buildings. The distinctive original building stood opposite from the (then) Sincere Department Store. An extension was built next to it in the 1930s, one of the first modern "skyscrapers" of Shanghai. After the Communist revolution in China (1949), the store was nationalised, traded under various names and no longer connected to Wong on in Hong Kong. The 1930s extension building houses a separate "Overseas Chinese Store", which, for many years, was one of the few places in Shanghai where people with overseas connections could spend their foreign exchange certificates to buy goods not available to ordinary Chinese consumers.

In 2005, the department store in the original 1918 building resumed the Chinese version of the Wing on name (Chinese: 永安; pinyin: Yǒng'ān). However, the store is owned by a separate company to Wing On, called "Yongan Department Store Co Ltd", a state-owned company. This company does not use the "Wing On" name in its English translations.[4] The exterior of the original store was restored to its appearance during the Wing On period. However, the interior has been drastically refurbished. The store has also changed its market orientation, focusing almost exclusively on domestic Chinese branded clothing targeted at visitors from other parts of China, with a small department in watches and other accessories.

See also

References

  1. "Kwok Chi Leung". webb-site.com. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  2. "Encyclopedia of Modern China, Vol 4, part 1". Scribd.com. 2 May 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  3. "Wing on website: About Wing On". Wingonet.com. 11 July 2013. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  4. http://www.yongan.sh.cn/about1.asp

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wing On Department Stores.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, December 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.