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Company type | Subsidiary |
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Industry | Food |
Headquarters | Seoul, South Korea |
Key people | Cho Sang-ho (CEO) |
Products | Baguette, croissant, cakeinbread, confectionery |
Revenue | 1.51 billion USD (2013) |
Parent | SPC Group |
Website | www |
Paris Baguette (Korean: 파리바게뜨, romanized: Paribagetteu) is a South Korean multinational chain of bakery-cafés, owned by the SPC Group and headquartered in Seoul. In 1986, it was established as a subsidiary of Shani Co., Ltd., and opened the first 'Paris Baguette' in Gwanghwamun, Seoul, and the first high-end bakery 'Paris Croissant' in Itaewon the following year, and the corporate name changed to the same as the brand name.
Founded in 1988, the franchise brand, Paris Baguette grew into the No. 1 bakery in Korea in 2004, branching out to local subsidiaries in the United States, Vietnam, Singapore, etc.
In 1988, Paris Croissant launched Paris Baguette, a popular bakery café franchise brand. As of November 2023, the chain had over 3,600 retail stores in South Korea, 99 stores in the United States, and 6 stores in Canada.[1] Paris Baguette also launched almost 185 retail stores in China, Vietnam, Singapore and France.[2]
Caffè Pascucci is an Italian espresso café franchise.[3]
Other franchises of Paris Croissant include LINA's and Tamati (sandwich), Passion5 (upscale dessert gallery), L'atelier (café restaurant). It also handles the Korean branch of Jamba Juice (smoothie).[3]
In 2022 a boycott of Paris Baguette took off after a worker at a Pyeongtaek factory was fatally crushed by a sauce mixing machine. Shortly before the incident another worker at the factory had sustained an injury to their hand from a production machine but was not sent to the hospital since they were not a full-time worker. Various Korean trade unions have condemned the company due to a history of safety issues and union busting.[4][5][6]
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Food chains in South Korea
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Casual dining |
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Coffee shops and tea rooms |
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Baked goods/sandwiches/tacos |
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Hamburgers |
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Pizza |
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Fried chicken |
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Dairy |
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Chinese/Taiwanese |
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Japanese |
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Former chains |
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