
Galeries Lafayette Haussmann enjoys rapid growth, amid store revamp and tourism boom
In the first half of 2025, the flagship achieved double-digit sales growth, outperforming the estimated 9% increase in tourists visiting France during the same period.
Annually, some 37 million people visit the handsome Art Nouveau store, Europe's largest – 60% of them non-French, a remarkable figure when one considers that 89 million people visited France in 2024. The recent increase in traffic and business has also been driven by a substantial revamp of key floors in this luxury bazaar.
'We have worked hard on improving the customer experience and offer and consumers have reacted very positively,' stressed Guillaume Houzé, board member and director of image, over a summer lunch Thursday.
Specifically, the store has expanded its space for prominent French runway brands such as Jacquemus, Lemaire and AMI, particularly in their menswear department, and has focused even more attention on their major league brands on the ground floor.
Not surprisingly, the store's top-selling brands are Louis Vuitton and Chanel. In an ongoing revamp of the huge store, private salons have been added to key brands' shop-in-shops at Haussmann.
'The goal is to make the customer experience comparable to a Vuitton flagship. Right now, we believe that Vuitton's store in Galeries Lafayette Haussmann is among the top five stores of Vuitton worldwide,' noted Houzé, great-great-grandson of the store's founder Théophile Bader, who opened the debut store in 1894.
Under buying director and board member Arthur Lemoine, the store has also expanded the presence of leading international labels, recently opening a striking Phoebe Philo boutique, adding Bottega Veneta and creating a 110-square-meter store for Paris' favorite new American label, The Row. It has also added the only French shop-in-shop of LVMH marque Patou, which will stage its next show this Sunday in Paris. Meanwhile, the boutique of Courrèges – thanks to the direction of the brilliant Franco-Belgian designer Nicolas Di Felice – has expanded from 20 square meters to 110 square meters.
'We want to nourish that difference in our offer, with more directional fashion, compared to other places in Paris,' explained Lemoine at a suitably Lucullan lunch in Galeries Lafayette's VIP salon.
Courgette flowers stuffed in crunchy vegetables served on Andalusian gazpacho, followed by cumin-inflected grilled sea bream, washed down by a rare white Bordeaux, Smith-Haute-Lafitte. The fine menu complements the sophisticated mode available in this giant retailing complex.
Familiar fixtures at major runway shows, the duo of Houzé and Lemoine are very excited about the recent debut show of Jonathan Anderson for Dior, where they sat front row.
'Personally, I thought it was formidable! We already have three Dior men's spaces, including for shoes and fashion. And cannot wait to get Jonathan's ideas for Dior in here in early January,' enthused Lemoine.
A tour of the main building, or buildings – there are four large, interconnected spaces at Galeries Lafayette Haussmann, including a beautiful Art Nouveau structure topped by a glass cupola – underlined how chock-a-block they are this summer. After a couple of years where the space slowly emerged from the Covid pandemic, it is now packed, with lines outside hot brands' spaces.
'Do you know, the Christmas before Saturday, over 300,000 visited Galeries Lafayette Haussmann, which is pretty special,' marveled Lemoine, who is also gradually renewing its beauty, scent and wellness offer, even if Haussmann already has the largest beauty space in Europe.
The growing traffic means that the famed flagship alone will break €2 billion in turnover in 2025, impressive numbers for a store with a total retail space of 70,000 square meters.
Breaking down revenue by key categories, women's ready-to-wear and men's ready-to-wear each count for 20% of sales; leather goods and bags for 20%; watches for 10%; beauty for 5%; while gifting, books, home, tabletop and restaurants make up the final 25%.
Internationally, this family-owned French institution is not resting on its laurels. Galeries Lafayette already has six large department store flagships outside of France, spreading from the Gulf to Jakarta to Shanghai.
Next up, a debut store in Mumbai, where work has already begun inside an architecturally distinguished Victoria Gothic building near the central city zone of the Maidans.
'Most of the property like that is owned by the municipality, making alterations very complicated. But our building is privately owned, so we can make the sort of changes to create an exciting store,' enthused Houzé.
Galeries Lafayette Mumbai, with 7,000 square meters of shopping space, will open at the end of 2026. One suspects Théophile Bader, whose bust in the VIP salon looks out at the rooftops of Paris to the July sun shining on Sacré-Cœur on Montmartre, would have been pleased.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fashion Network
3 hours ago
- Fashion Network
SMCP: Towards a resolution of the 15.5% capital dispute?
The incredible imbroglio surrounding the governance of French luxury brand group SMCP is drawing closer to a conclusion. On Friday, the group announced in a press release "that it has been informed that the Singapore High Court has today decided to order Dynamic Treasure Group Ltd (DTG) to return to European Topsoho S.à r.l. (ETS) the 15.5% stake in SMCP that was transferred to it in 2021". This restitution must be carried out within one week of the ruling. The wording may seem complex. But for SMCP's creditors, who have been united under the GLAS trustee since the beginning of this rocky affair pitting them against the family of the group's former Chinese owners, it could mean recovering the missing share of capital that "vanished" four years ago. At the time, European Topsoho, the 53% shareholder owned by Yafu Qiu, former chairman of SMCP's board of directors and head of the Chinese Shandong Ruyi group, had discreetly sold over 15% of the capital in the midst of a financial slump. An investigation revealed that these shares had become the property of a company called Dynamic Treasure Group, a holding company run by Chenran Qiu, daughter of Yafu Qiu. Since then, legal proceedings have multiplied. After a British High Court ruling on the case a year ago, followed by a victory for GLAS on appeal, the proceedings were transferred to Singapore, where the shares are held. This time, the Singapore decision is once again in favor of GLAS. However, DTG still has the option of appealing and thus postponing the return of these shares. Why are these legal issues important for a minority shareholding? Because GLAS brings together European Topsoho's creditors, who have been saying since the beginning of this affair that they don't want to be shareholders in a brand. They intend to sell their stake in the parent company of Sandro, Maje, Claudie Pierlot and Fursac, which generates annual sales of over €1 billion. The return of their 15.5% stake would enable them to move forward with a project to sell their 53% stake, while the group's market capitalization stands at 356 million euros, with a share price of 4.55 euros a few minutes before the close of trading on the Paris Bourse on July 4. While at its peak, the share price had flirted with 25 euros per share in 2019, it was recently closer to 2 euros and has rallied in recent months, up 23% since the start of the year. The end of the legal battle would therefore probably mean the start of a project to sell off the 53% stake. Financial backers, employees and partners of the French group are therefore keeping a close eye on the wording of DTG's potential appeal to Singapore. This article is an automatic translation. Click here to read the original article.


Fashion Network
3 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Jonathan Anderson reinvents JW Anderson as lifestyle brand
There's been a lot of speculation about what would happen to Dior creative supremo Jonathan Anderson's signature JW Anderson brand since he took on the combined women's and men's role at Dior. And now it seems that the brand is being reinvented with a lifestyle retailer focus. Anderson in recent months has become the first Dior creative chief to oversee both the women's (including couture) and men's collections since Christian Dior himself. And that's a big job. While it was possible to continue with JW Anderson as a full fashion offer when he was Loewe creative director, the size and importance of the Dior brand and the huge number of collections it produces mean it was seen as very unlikely that JWA would continue unchanged. The label's Instagram page talks of 'new beginnings July 2025 featuring a preview of what's to come' and there are images of classic fashion items but also lifestyle, home and craft pieces. Another post also shows new packaging. And it seems that one of the most time-consuming focuses for a designer brand — runway shows — are being paused indefinitely. In an interview with American trade paper WWD, he said seasonal runway collections won't happen and the London and Milan stores are being closed before reopening in September. Other London stores will also open, along with locations in New York and Paris. There will be a big focus on craft and lifestyle products from other brands (including Wedgwood, Hope Springs and Lucie Gledhill Jewellery). It feels very much like the label transitioning to being a multi-brand and own-brand retailer but a very exclusive and quirky one. Fashion-wise, expect a slow fashion approach with new styles, colours and so on when it feels right rather than because the season has changed. Anderson also said lifestyle guru Terence Conran (founder of the Habitat chain) was an inspiration in the revamp.


Fashion Network
3 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Le Coq Sportif: Dan Mamane wins the match and chooses Alexandre Fauvet as CEO
Dan Mamane is not, of course, alone in building the project selected by the Paris court. He is backed by the Mirabaud Patrimoine Vivant investment fund, which in the past took a minority stake in Le Coq Sportif under the aegis of former French Minister of the Economy Renaud Dutreil. The brand will be entrusted to Alexandre Fauvet, a former Lacoste executive who was recently CEO and minority shareholder of premium alpine brand Fusalp. In a press release, the consortium also stated that the "project includes the support of the Japanese group Itochu, owner of the brand in Asia, as well as that of Udi Avshalom, a world-renowned sneaker expert and former COO of Adidas, who will take on the position of Global Brand Strategic Advisor." A large-scale partnership, but for what project? "The plan validated by the court aims to reposition Le Coq Sportif as a benchmark international brand in high-end sports and lifestyle. The ambition is to achieve sales of 300 million euros in 2030 (compared with 122 in 2023) and "a return to sustained profitability." To achieve this, the brand will "develop its offer, with a new segmentation around four universes: sportstyle, sport heritage, lifestyle chic and technical performance. Distribution will be rebalanced between the selective network, e-commerce, marketplaces, and affiliated stores. Internationally, the ambition is clear: to triple the share of sales outside France by 2027." "After some difficult years, Le Coq Sportif needs to regain its influence and desirability, and that's what our project is all about. It is based on strong convictions and the assets of this emblematic brand: a French brand, unique textile know-how, a precious territorial anchorage, and immense potential for reconquest," explained Mamane in the consortium's press release. "We will give back to Le Coq Sportif the means to innovate, to seduce world markets again and to assert itself as a reference of French style and sport." As rumors have suggested in recent weeks, the French industrial aspect seems to have weighed heavily. The buyer explains that the historic workshops in Romilly-sur-Seine, a few kilometers from Troyes, will play an important role in the strategy, which aims to bring together creative, industrial and strategic functions, whereas the company previously had major offices in the heart of Paris. The Romilly-sur-Seine site will become a true reference center for textile innovation, high-end production, and the circular economy. It will also house a research and development center, enabling the integration of the most advanced technologies in terms of design, materials, and responsible production." All the expertise of the new CEO, Fauvet, will be needed to deploy this approach to the product, at a time when the brand has been confronted with delicate seasons in terms of sales to both French and international multi-brand customers.