Herzmansky was a department store in Vienna. It was founded by the Austrian Jewish merchant August Herzmansky in 1863.[1] The department store was located at Mariahilfer Strasse 26–30 / Stiftgasse 3 in the 7th district of Vienna, Neubau. A branch of the Peek & Cloppenburg chain has been in its place since 1998.
Company type | Department store |
---|---|
Industry | Retail |
Founded | 1863 Vienna, Austria |
Founder | August Herzmansky |
Fate | Renamed (1998) |
Headquarters | Vienna, Austria |
Key people | August Herzmansky Johann Herzmansky Eduard Herzmansky Johann Falnbigl Wilfried Falnbigl Max Delfiner |
Products | Clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, and housewares |
The store became the largest drapery/department store in the Austro-Hungarian Empire by 1892. After August's death, his nephews and later other relatives took over the management, with various expansions and renovations taking place over the years. The store was "Aryanized" during the Nazi period but was later returned to its rightful owner, Max Delfiner, in 1948. After several changes in ownership, mergers, and modernizations, the Herzmansky department store closed in 1997. The site was sold to the Düsseldorf fashion chain Peek & Cloppenburg in 1998, ending the Herzmansky department store's long history. The original building on Stiftgasse still stands, preserving its exterior appearance.
History
editAugust Herzmansky, who originated in Odry in what is now the Czech Republic, opened a general store in 1863 in the 7th district at Kirchengasse 2.[2] The concept was well received by the shopping public due to its upscale product range and fixed prices. By 1892 Herzmansky was the largest drapery/department store in the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[1]
Architect Maximilian Katscher built the new building at Stiftgasse 3 between 1896 and 1897.[3] This five-storey building was erected on a deep parcel of land (with a wrought-iron structure). A courtyard was designed in the middle with pillars (with stucco covering) and columns (covered with synthetic marble). At the end of the courtyard was a two-branched three-tier main staircase (also of wrought-iron), which was demolished in 1963. Two more staircases connected the building with another courtyard and a neighboring building. The ground and first floors were supported by the aforementioned limestone pillars, the second and third floors by marble pillars (made from Istrian Smerique marble).[1]
The expansion of the business led to Herzmansky having five locations by 1917.[1]
Succession
editAfter the death of the company's founder, his nephews Johann (1857–1924) and Eduard Herzmansky (1852–1911) took over the management of the company, but were unable to continue their uncle's success. During this period, Gerngroß department store, which had originally partnered with Herzmansky, established himself with a dominant Art Nouveau building (1904) on Mariahilfer Strasse, which had become the main shopping street of Vienna.[4] In 1906, the nephews left the business. A relative by marriage, Johann Falnbigl (1866-1932), took over the management and became a partner. Major extensions were built in 1908 and 1928 during Falnbigl's management. After Falnbigl's death on 7 February 1932, his son Wilfried took over the management for a short time, but left the partnership in 1933.[1] Max Delfiner was the sole owner of the Herzmansky company from 1933 to 1938.[1]
Nazi Period
editWith the Anschluss, the store was "Aryanized" in favor of the Dornbirn-based textile producers Rhomberg and Hämmerle, and the previous Jewish owners had to emigrate. In the period 1938–1940, the purchase of the property at Mariahilfer Strasse 30, giving increased frontage to a thoroughfare with greater footfall, led to an expansion of the sales area and the number of employees to 700 people.[1]
The battle for Vienna in April 1945 caused considerable destruction. On the night of 12-13 April 1945, two Herzmansky stores fell victim to the fires, but operations resumed on 15 May 1945.
Post-War
editOn 8 November 1948, the business was returned to its rightful owner, Max Delfiner.[5] The management of the company passed to his son, Henry. Then in 1957 the Delfiner sold the business to the German Hertie Group.[6] In preparation for the centennial celebrations in 1963, larger parts of the building were refurbished, with some parts being demolished. In 1965, the store was sold in turn to a consortium of General Shopping SA, CA-SBC, Turicum AG Inter and Durum Hansa AG. This consortium acquired the neighboring department store, Gerngroß in 1966. Three years later, Gerngroß and Herzmansky merged.
The premises were modernized, and in 1971 a parking garage for 690 cars was put into operation (7th, Stiftgasse 3). In 1988 there was a fundamental conversion to an "adventure department store" (six floors with 15,000 square meters of retail space), opening on 15 September 1988.
In 1996, the Gerngross Group, and thus Herzmansky, was sold to a consortium made up of the Palmers textile group and Hans Schmid, the operator of the GGK advertising agency. While the Gerngross department store was reopened in February 1997, after a renovation, the Herzmansky department store was closed on 12 July 1997.
The Herzmansky site was sold to the Düsseldorf fashion chain Peek & Cloppenburg in 1998. On 4 March 1998 the first Weltstadthaus (world city house) concept store by Peek & Cloppenburg opened in the Herzmansky building.[7] As the name was discontinued, the long history of the Herzmansky department store came to an end, for the time being. Memorabilia and the bust of the founder, which previously adorned the foyer of the department store, are now kept in the district museum in the new building. In 2005, Sparkassen Immobilien AG bought the majority stake in Gerngross Kaufhaus AG from the Palmers Group. These include the department stores Steffl and Herzmansky.
The original building on the Stiftgasse is preserved in its original condition from the outside, with the inscription "A. Herzmansky” framed in the cornice in golden mosaics clearly recognizable, as well as on the black marble panels on the street front at ground level. Today there is an upscale café on the first floor, which is operated by Cafe Gerstner.
Pictures
edit-
An advertisement from 1906
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Advertisement in Die Muskete, 1912
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The inscription on the facade of Stiftgasse 3
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"Aryanization" notice in March 1938, after the "Anschluss" of Austria that month – and at the same time an advertisement for the 75th anniversary of Herzmansky
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Krupitz, Siegfried (1988). 125 Jahre Herzmansky 1863-1988. Gerngross Kaufhaus AG, Vienna.
- ^ Kašpar, Pavel; Mateiciuc, Emil. "August Herzmansky z Oder, otec vídeňských obchodních domů". POODŘÍ – časopis obyvatel horní Odry 1/2013, S. 36–46.
- ^ "Maximilian Katscher". Architektenlexikon Wien 1770–1945. Architekturzentrum Wien, Vienna. 2007.
- ^ Lehne, Lehne; Meißl, Gerhard; Hann, Edith (1990). Wiener Warenhäuser 1865–1914,Forschungen und Beiträge zur Wiener Stadtgeschichte, Band 20. Deuticke, Vienna. ISBN 3-7005-4488-X.
- ^ Melichar, Peter (2004). Verdrängung und Expansion: Enteignungen und Rückstellungen in Vorarlberg. Veröffentlichungen der Österreichischen Historikerkommission, Band 19, ZDB-ID 2135683-X. Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, Vienna. ISBN 3-486-56783-7.
- ^ Faber, Elfriede (1995). Neubau. Geschichte des 7. Wiener Gemeindebezirks und seiner alten Orte. Erste Auflage. Edition Wien, Vienna. ISBN 3-85058-065-2.
- ^ "Weltstadthaus macht Weltstadt aus". derStandard, 30 August 2011. 2011. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
Further reading
edit- Warenhaus A. Herzmansky in Wien. Dipl. Arch. Maximilian Katscher in Wien (Tafel Nr. 42). In: Wiener Bauten-Album, Year 1899, Beilage zur „Wiener Bauindustrie-Zeitung“. XVI. Jahrgang (1898/99), p. 14; Abbildung Nr. 42. (Online bei ANNO) .
- Warenhaus A. Herzmansky: Herzmansky-Zeitung. Erscheinungsverlauf: September 1930 – Dezember 1933 = Nr. 1–39. ZDB-ID 2350675-1. Herzmansky, Vienna, OBV.
- MA, Heinz Conrads (Beteiligter), Norbert Pawlicky (Beteiligter): Grosser Konzerthaussaal (…) 17. September 1963 (…) 100 Jahre Herzmansky Jubiläumsmodenschau (…). 1-Bogen-Plakat. S.n., s. l. 1967. – Online.
- Rudolf Matouschek, Lutz Wodak (Ausführender): Herzmansky Modenschau (…) Konzerthaus Grosser Saal (…) 7. März 1967 (…) Frühjahrsmode (…). 1-Bogen-Plakat. S.n., s. l. 1967. – Online.
- Rudolf Hausner: Rudolf Hausner bei Herzmansky, ab 19. Juni. Ölbilder, Handzeichnungen, Druckgrafiken. 1-Bogen-Plakat. S.n., s. l. 1972. – Online.
- Herzmansky, August. Tagblattarchiv. (Pressestimmen). Zwei Blatt. (Vienna) 1984, OBV[permanent dead link ].
- Peter Melichar: Verdrängung und Expansion: Enteignungen und Rückstellungen in Vorarlberg. Veröffentlichungen der Österreichischen Historikerkommission, Band 19, ZDB-ID 2135683-X. Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, Vienna, 2004, ISBN 3-486-56783-7, insbesondere S. 107.
- Joseph Schwaighofer: Zur Geschichte des Wiener Warenhauses. In: Wettbewerbe. Architekturjournal. Nr. 267/268, Februar/März 2008, ISSN 1015-4477. Werba, Vienna 2008, S. 36 f.