ABC (legal name: ABC s.a.l. alias ABC Group, LinkedIn: ABC Lebanon), is a company operating ABC-branded shopping malls and department stores, as well as individual boutiques of fashion brands, in Lebanon with a total gross leasable area of 115,000 m2 (1,240,000 sq ft).[1]
The business dates back to 1936 with the opening of ABC at Bab Idriss Square, central Beirut, 580 m2 (6,200 sq ft) in size, followed by ABC Bab Borj at 350 m2 (3,800 sq ft) in 1940, and ABC Hamra 415 m2 (4,470 sq ft) in 1948.[1]
Robert Fadel served as Chairman & CEO from 2009 to 2017, and remains a member of the board of directors. The Harvard Business School case “From Beirut with Love” summarized his experience as head of ABC, his family business.[2]
Innovations
ABC claims many innovations in Lebanese and Middle Eastern retail, such as fixed prices (when bargaining was the tradition), employing women in its sales force, advertising, opening the Middle East's first "international standard" open-air mall, banning smoking, implementing waste management, opening the largest private photovoltaic plant in Lebanon and introducing magnetic gift cards.[1]
Locations
Name
Opened
Closed
Shopping center
ABC Dept. Store
Mall stores
Movie theater (screens)
Parking spaces
Cafés and restaurants
Notes
Gross leasable area
Built-up area
Gross leasable area
Built-up area
ABC Verdun
2017
open
50,000
155,500
6,463
10,600
200+
11
1,700
16
ABC Achrafieh
2003
open
40,000
126,500
7,800
13,500
105
7
1,200
21
ABC Dbayeh
1979
open
25,280
44,250
24,157
44,275
285
8
12 (mall), 13 (dept. store)
ABC Furn El Chebbak
1994
closed
ABC Kaslik
1978
closed
ABC Zahlé
1973
now outlet
415
ABC Hamra
1948
now outlet
415
ABC Bab Borj
1940
closed
350
ABC Bab Idriss
1936
closed
580
ABC Tripoli (outlet)
closed
Dbayeh
In 1979 ABC opened what it claims to be the first true modern department store in the Middle East, in Dbayeh,[1] a city on the Mediterranean Sea between Beirut and Jounieh. It was 15,490 m2 (166,700 sq ft) in size. In 2009 it was expanded to a size of 44,250 m2 (476,300 sq ft).[1] At that time New York firm nARCHITECTS designed, based on the company's logo, a laser cut aluminum screen enveloping the 200,000 sq ft (19,000 m2) existing building, and inverse cut-outs to adorn the facades of the 250,000 sq ft (23,000 m2) addition.[3][4][5]
Achrafieh
In 2003, ABC opened its 126,500 m2 (1,362,000 sq ft) flagship shopping center including a 13,500 m2 (145,000 sq ft) ABC department store within it, the first international-standard open-air mall in Lebanon, in the upmarket central Achrafieh neighborhood.[1]
In 2017, agency KKD completed a redesign of the department store's interior.[6]
In November 2023 during the 2023 Israel–Gaza war, ABC Achrafieh was at the center of a controversy where it was claimed that the Palestinian keffiyeh was banned at the mall after an employee was told to remove their keffiyeh during work hours. It was also claimed that merchandise related to Palestine was removed. ABC later confirmed that the management did ask an employee to remove her keffiyeh due to the dress code for employees that bans religious and partisan symbols, but also said that customers are free to wear what they want, and said that they have no problem if one of their stores wants to sell merchandise related to Palestine. [7]
Verdun
In 2017, ABC opened its third mall in Verdun, southern Beirut, 155,500 m2 (1,674,000 sq ft) in size. ABC Verdun is home to 200 shops and a 10,800 m2 (116,000 sq ft) ABC Department Store. It measures 150,000 m2 (1,600,000 sq ft) and was developed on an ex-property of the Church in a joint venture with Bahaa Hariri, the Group of one of the sons of ex-Prime Minister of Lebanon, Rafic Hariri, murdered in 2005, whose other son Saad Hariri also served as Prime Minister. ABC Group holds 40% of the capital and operates the mall.[8]
The architectural design by Seattle-based CalissonRTKL is adapted to the climate, which avoids having to air-condition or heat the common areas: a large canopy houses the roof terrace where the restaurants and the garden are located. Below, the corridors are protected from rain but the air circulates and is refreshed naturally.[8]
Other stores
Other former ABC stores that are now closed include ABC at Bab Idriss Square (opened 1936), ABC Bab Borj (opened 1940), ABC Hamra (opened 1948, now an outlet store), ABC Zahlé (opened 1973, now an outlet store), ABC Kaslik (opened 1978) and ABC Furn El Chebbak (opened 1994).
^ ab"A Beyrouth, le groupe ABC y croit encore" [In Beirut, the ABC group still believes: Despite the war a few kilometers away, a difficult economic situation and absent international investors, the ABC Group opens a 150,000-square-meter shopping center]. Les Echos (in French). 14 November 2017. Retrieved 30 November 2023.