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In 1877 the Spaniard Don Bernardo García Robes y Ordoñez founded El Cajón de El Nuevo Mundo Spanish: The Trunk/Box/Drawer of The New World on the corner of Capuchinas and 1st Monterilla, today Venustiano Carranza and 5 de Febrero streets, in the Historic center of Mexico City. The store sold high-quality fabrics, hats and millinery, women's ...
La Parisina is a chain of department stores in Mexico operated by the company Grupo Parisina S.A de C.V. It sells mainly fabrics and millinery, home decor, embroidery, sewing machines, rugs and other goods. The group first began operations in 1933 [1] [2] when Juan José Sierra opened his 220 m2 store in the Historic Center of Mexico City. [3]
Soriana 1920s logo. The very first Soriana store. The Soriana company has its origins in 1905, the year in which Don Pascual Borque (from Soria, Spain) founded a fabric business and perfumery under the name 'LA SORIANA' in Torreón, Coahuila, later incorporating in 1920, a wholesale merchandise offer, which with this became a benchmark in terms of purchases and consumption in Torreón.
Suburbia is a Mexican chain of department stores now part of the El Puerto de Liverpool group and founded in 1970 in Mexico City.Its main activity consists of the sale of clothing, appliances, electronics and cell phones aimed at the middle and lower economic classes.
In the Americas, Mexico is part of the Central America Free Trade Agreement, [22] and recently Mexico and Peru struck a deal for the import and export of clothing and other textiles. [23] Mexico's textile exports to Canada increased fivefold by the mid-2000s, raising its market share in that country to five percent.
In 1936, the new Liverpool Center building was inaugurated on Avenida 20 de Noviembre, designed by architect Enrique de la Mora and the first escalators were installed there. 1962, opened its first branch of Liverpool, Liverpool Insurgentes, in then-suburban Colonia Del Valle, 9 km southwest of its downtown Mexico City store.
Mexico Aurrerá – acquired by and rebranded to Wal-Mart; Germany Plus - closed in 20 November 2010, later the stores acquired by Carrefour in 21 November 2010; Mexico Blanco – acquired by Gigante which at once, acquired by Soriana in 2007; Mexico Gigante – acquired by Soriana; Mexico Comercial Mexicana
Kimberly-Clark de México (KCM) is a Mexican company that engages in the manufacture and commercialization of disposable products for daily use by consumers within and away-from home in Mexico and internationally. The company's products include diapers and childcare products, feminine pads, incontinence care products, bath tissue, napkins ...