Horten AG
Horten AG was a German department store chain founded by Helmut Horten in 1936 and headquartered in Düsseldorf, Germany.
With up to 80 stores throughout Germany, Horten ranked fourth-largest among German department store chains, after Karstadt, Kaufhof and Hertie.
Horten was one of the most modern German department store companies in the 1960s and 1970s. Many new stores were built and the traditional, long-established high street stores were renovated, modernized, and in some cases, expanded. Horten built the first department stores that included car parks and petrol stations. Horten wanted to be the department store of choice for customers from the suburbs who had their first cars and did not want to travel into the cities by bus or tram. In addition to their high-end downtown department stores, Horten built new "edge of downtown stores." Every department store featured a restaurant, mostly located on the top floor. In the 1960s they were called "KUPFERSPIESS". Later, Horten began to reorganise them into self-service-restaurants and called them "Bon appetit" or "Horten-Restaurant," also combined together as "Bon appetit: Ihr Horten-Restaurant." In the 1990s Horten also began introducing the Galeria-concept for its restaurants and gave them a new food distribution sector and a lighter outfit. After Kaufhof took over Horten, they merged their two restaurant companies "Bel-Terine" and "Bon appetit" into one, dubbed "DINEA." Smaller restaurants with less service were called "Grillpfanne."
Horten's dark brown interiors morphed into a more modern and fresh look with the introduction of the new Galeria stores in the 1980s, with an emphasis on lighter colors such as blue, light gray and white. Some of the bigger stores added food courts called "delikatessa" and also added onsite supermarkets. After returning from a visit to the United States and returning with the concept, Helmut Horten opened Germany's first supermarkets in the basement floors of his department stores. They were innovative, modern, and much larger than most German grocery stores at the time.
In 1968 Helmut Horten sold all of his shares in the company and was not subsequently seen at celebratory occasions of Horten AG. Helmut Horten died in 1987, at this time his former company had been acquired by British American Tobacco plc.
Until 1988, Horten operated some of its department stores under the name of Merkur; some of the group's smaller department stores were called DeFaKa, but these had all been replaced with modern types of Horten department stores by the 1970s. In 1988 Horten introduced a new concept for their department stores called the "GALERIA" concept. This proved to be a very successful venture for Horten AG. Horten AG decided to refresh the 39 biggest stores with the GALERIA design, though this goal was never fully implemented. That year, Horten founded Horten-Extra GmbH to hold its thirteen smallest locations not branded with the new GALERIA design. Ten of these Horten-Extra stores were sold to Kaufring AG in 1993. The other three Horten-Extra stores also did not have successful histories. The location in Dortmund was closed directly after the ten Horten-Extra stores were sold; it was renovated as a mall. The other two Horten-Extra stores became part of Kaufhof and traded for a few years once again as Horten, until the year 2000, when both stores closed because they were considered too small to be renamed Galeria Kaufhof.
In 1994 competitor Kaufhof took over Horten and - over a ten-year period - all Horten department stores were either renamed Kaufhof, sold or closed. This process ended in 2004 with the last stores being closed or renamed and the Horten name disappeared. Today only one store - the Carsch-Haus in Düssldorf - still has the Horten logo on its facade, struck in stone over the main doors. The former name "Horten im Carsch-Haus" was dropped in 1996. In 2008 Kaufhof cleaned the Horten stone logos and they are now clearly visible on the facade. The store now simply trades as Carsch-Haus and wasn't changed into Kaufhof. A Galeria Kaufhof store is located in the same street. The 'Carsch-Haus' in Düsseldorf was the finest department store of Horten AG and served as a flagship store. It is now run by Kaufhof, but still trades as Carsch-Haus. This store has a very interesting and unique story, as in the 1980s it was dismantled stone by stone and later rebuilt only a few feet away. This became necessary because the 'Rheinbahn' had planned to build a subway station under the building. After rebuilding, the Carsch-Haus became Horten AG's most modern department store and a model of development for the Galeria concept.
In 1995 Horten AG became a real estate company and leased the Horten stores to Kaufhof. The operating business was transferred to the Horten GALERIA GmbH, which was later merged with Kaufhof AG.
Former Horten Department Stores
- Augsburg,
- Aachen,
- Andernach,
- Baden-Baden,
- Bergheim,
- Berlin,
- Berlin,
- Bielefeld,
- Bochum-Wattenscheid,
- Braunschweig,
- Bremen,
- Bremerhaven,
- Cottbus
- Dessau
- Dortmund,
- Duisburg,
- Duisburg,
- Duisburg-Marxloh,
- Düsseldorf,
- Düsseldorf,
- Erlangen,.
- Essen,
- Frankfurt am Main,
- Frankfurt,
- Gera,, Horten was planning to replace it with a new Galeria Horten retail store in a mall on the outskirts of the city. But they had no permit for the city government. The government wanted to keep the store in the city center. Horten then planned in another location, just a few steps from the previous house. The new building was carried out by the Galeria Kaufhof years later. After the completion of the new building, the Horten store was closed and converted into a shopping center. This center, to commemorate the historic name of Oscar Tietz,
- Gevelsberg,
- Gotha,
- Gießen,
- Günthersdorf,
- Hagen,
- Halle,
- Hamburg, Eidelstedt
- Hamburg,
- Hamburg-Poppenbüttel,
- Hamburg-Wandsbek,
- Hamm,
- Hannover,, renamed Galeria Kaufhof )
- Heidelberg,
- Heidenheim,
- Heilbronn,
- Hildesheim,
- Ingolstadt,
- Jena,, could not open as Galeria Horten, because of the small retail space. It was planned to build a large extension to the existing department store, next to the store was a large open space available. But the weak sales of this store led to a quick abandonment of the plans and the store.
- Kempen,
- Kempten
- Kiel,
- Krefeld,. In 2008, the renovation and plans to reconstruct the store were stopped. Also in 2008 the "Horten Unterwelt"
- Leipzig,
- Leipzig-Paunsdorf,
- Ludwigshafen,
- Mannheim,
- Marburg,
- Mülheim an der Ruhr,
- Münster,
- Moers,
- Neuss,
- Nürnberg,
- Oldenburg,
- Osnabrück,
- Pforzheim,
- Pirmasens,
- Plauen
- Potsdam
- Recklinghausen,
- Regensburg,
- Reutlingen,
- Schwäbisch Gmünd,
- Schweinfurt,
- Stuttgart,
- Stralsund
- Sulzbach,
- Trier,
- Ulm,
- Viersen,
- Weimar,
- Wetzlar,
- Wiesbaden,
- Witten,
- Worms,
- Wuppertal,
- Zwickau