Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The concept of supermarkets (and later hypermarkets) came to Bulgaria after 1989 and most supermarkets are made up of joint ventures between Bulgarian and foreign investors. Since 2000, there has been a strong growth in the number of supermarkets in the country, particularly in Sofia and other main urban areas. [ 1 ]
9 Bulgaria. 10 Croatia. 11 ... Toggle Denmark subsection. 13.1 Greenland. 14 Estonia. 15 Faroe Islands. 16 Finland. 17 France. 18 Georgia. 19 ... This is a list of ...
The largest hypermarket in France is the Carrefour store in Villiers-en-Bière, Seine-et-Marne (77) in the Île-de-France region, with an area of 25 000 m 2. [ 41 ] E.Leclerc opened its first hypermarket store in 1964 in Landerneau , near Brest , and is now the dominant hypermarket chain in France, with 489 hypermarkets. [ 42 ]
In the 2000s, the company established branches in Slovakia (since 2000), Croatia (2001), Poland (2001), Romania (2005), Bulgaria (2006) and Moldova (2018). In 2006 and 2007, other store openings followed in Germany and Kaufland also took over shares of competitors. In February 2009 the corporation claimed to have 73,000 employees in Germany. [11]
CBA is a Hungarian supermarket chain with almost 5,200 stores. It operates in Bulgaria, Lithuania, Czech Republic, Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Serbia and Slovakia. [1] There were 134 stores in Hungary in February 2018. Most CBA stores have grill bars, bakeries, butcher's and wine shops.
Fantastico (Фантастико) is a Bulgarian supermarket chain founded in 1991. Fantastico is part of the retail sector and primarily sells foodstuffs. The first supermarket was opened at 72 Oborischte street. Since then, the company began expanding mostly in the capital of Bulgaria.
An internet prankster who planted a fake Aldi supermarket on Google Maps has caused havoc in rural south Wales.. Expectant shoppers and even giant delivery truck drivers have become stuck as they ...
Founded as a 51% foreign-owned company in 1995, it opened its first supermarket in Varna in 1994 and became 100% Bulgarian-owned in 2003. Piccadilly was known for its near-complete dominance of the market in Varna to the extent that it prevented large international chains such as Billa from opening new stores.