Seibu Department Stores


The Seibu Department Stores, Ltd. is a Japanese department store. The first store to trade under the name opened its doors in 1949. Seibu is typical of Japanese department stores with a wide variety of stores doing business on several floors. The company is now a subsidiary of Seven & I Holdings Co., Limited.

Japan

The Seibu Department Stores flagship store is located in Ikebukuro. In Tokyo, there are stores in Shibuya and Ikebukuro. As of 2020, there are 8 stores in the whole country. In August 2020, Seibu will close its stores in Okazaki and Otsu while downsizing its stores in Akita and Fukui due to poor sales.
In addition to department stores, Seibu operates the specialty store Loft and :ja:シェルガーデン|The Garden/Shell Garden supermarket, both are also part of Seven & I Holdings Co.. Seibu previously operates Parco, now operated by J. Front Retailing, Muji, now operating independently, and Seiyu Group, now owned by Walmart. Seibu, Parco, and Seiyu are previously part of the now-defunct :ja:セゾングループ|Seibu Saison group, while Muji previously known as Seiyu's private brand.

Automobile imports

From 1960 until 1995, Seibu Department stores sold imported European and American cars. Competing with Yanase, Seibu sold Citroen, Saab, Chevrolet, Fiat, Ferrari, Holden, and Peugeot. It was originally called :ja:西欧自動車|Western European Cars starting in 1963 until Seibu assumed operations as :ja:|Seibu Motors in 1971. Successor company Shin Seibu Car Sales took over in 1995 and kept importing Citroëns until the company was dissolved in 2002.

International

Indonesia

Seibu's first foray in Indonesia as Jakarta Seibu was opened in 1995 in the Mega Pasaraya complex, located near a busy bus terminal, Blok M, in Jakarta. It occupies four levels of the eight-storey building, offering upscale shopping experience for the upper-class, with an atrium at the centre. The department store is operated by ALatief Corporation, a company that manages a major local department store, Pasaraya. The two department stores are adjacent and a pedestrian bridge connects the buildings. The department store, widely regarded as one of the most luxurious to ever open in the nation, had in-store boutiques of brands such as Yves Saint Laurent, Aigner, Versace,, Kenzo, and more - completed by counters of Prada, Dior, etc. However, due to the 1997/8 recession and location, Jakarta Seibu failed to attract its targeted market along with numerous factors, and closed down in 1999.
Seibu re-entered the country on 9 May 2007, occupying four levels of the west mall area of Grand Indonesia Shopping Town. Similar to its predecessor, Seibu is once again segmented for the Indonesia's upper-mid class market, providing array of new brands and services. Now operated by PT. Mitra Adiperkasa Tbk, who also operates Sogo and Galeries Lafayette department store; the grand opening of store was held together with the mall in 20 May 2009, despite soft-opening the store two years earlier. It is the oldest continuous Seibu operating outside Japan despite 8 years hiatus since the original Blok M store's closure in 1999.

Malaysia

Sogo Department Store Sdn Bhd, TRX City Sdn Bhd and Lendlease announced that Seibu will open its first Malaysian store at The Exchange TRX.
It will span 250,000 square feet, featuring over 400-500 retail brands across 4 levels and it will be the first international luxury department store in Malaysia to house various mix of contemporary fashion brands and Japanese fashion brands that are new to Malaysia, largest collection of children's luxury fashion brands, and Malaysia's first Japanese food hall.
The opening date is currently unknown as the mall itself is still under construction.

Former

Hong Kong

Seibu opened their first non-Japanese location in Hong Kong at Langham Place in but sold their operations to Dickson Concepts in 1996, but the store operated until September 2013. The location has since been occupied by Beauty Avenue.

United States

In 1962, Seibu opened a branch at the corner of Wilshire and Fairfax in Los Angeles. It was the first Japanese department store in the mainland United States. Despite much publicity, the store attracted little more than curiosity and closed after only two years. The building was later occupied by Ohrbach's and is currently home to the Petersen Automotive Museum.