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Wong (supermarket)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wong
Company typeAnonymous Society
IndustryRetail
Founded1942
ProductsSupermarkets
Websitewww.wong.pe

Wong (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈwoŋg]) is a supermarket chain in Peru. Known until 2005 as E. Wong, it was started as a small store in 1942 by Chinese Peruvians in a residential area of the Miraflores District in Lima.

History and development

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Store in Plaza San Miguel, Lima

In 1942, Erasmo Wong Chiang Moreno, a Chinese-Peruvian, opened a store at a corner on the tenth block of 2 de Mayo Avenue, in a residential area in San Isidro, a district of Lima. The family business was succeeded by a store operating under the name of "E. Wong" at an old house at the Óvalo Gutiérrez, a roundabout in Miraflores, which opened in 1982.[1] By 1990, five stores had been opened and two years later all the stores were expanded. In 1993, the company purchased two competing chains, Galax and Todos, expanding again in 1995 and operating 15 stores by 1999 with the inauguration of another building in Las Gardenias neighbourhood in Santiago de Surco.[2] In 2004 it opened its branch in Asia, considered the most expensive in the country.[3]

All stores operated by the chain were closed on July 6, 2005, and immediately reinaugurated with its new name of Wong.[4] Two years later, the store was acquired by Chilean company Cencosud for 500 million dollars.[5] This was originally denied by the chain's founder himself and was also taken very negatively by the Peruvian populace, marking the beginning of a slow decline in the chain’s overall market share.

In 2016, a fire at the supermarket at Asia Boulevard completely destroyed the store's interior, being put out by 11 p.m.[6] After extensive restoration works, the store reopened a week later.[7]

The Gran Corso de Fiestas Patrias, a large parade held annually a few weeks before July 28, the day of Peruvian independence, is organized by Wong and attended by more than 100,000 people. The parade is usually celebrated in Miraflores and ends with a fireworks display.

References

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  1. ^ Loayza, Jorge (2007-08-23). "El adiós del patriarca". La República. Archived from the original on 2007-08-23.
  2. ^ "Las claves del Imperio Wong". CDI. Archived from the original on 2006-10-25.
  3. ^ Tolentino, Scheila (2004-03-19). "Conoce el SUPERMERCADO más caro de PERÚ: venden licores de S/5.900, carnes de S/539 y comida gourmet". La República.
  4. ^ "Tiendas E. Wong cierra desde el miércoles". La República. 2005-07-03.
  5. ^ "Chilena Cencosud compra la cadena peruana Wong por 500 millones de dólares". EFE. El Economista. 2007-12-17.
  6. ^ "Incendio consumió supermercado en el Boulevard de Asia". El Comercio. 2016-01-26.
  7. ^ "Wong volvió a abrir sus puertas en Boulevard Asia". Gestión. 2016-01-29.