Primark
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![]() PRIMARK store in Boston, Massachusetts opened in September 2015
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Native name
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Primark |
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Subsidiary of Associated British Foods | |
Industry | Retail |
Founded | June 1969 in Dublin, Ireland |
Founders | Arthur Ryan |
Headquarters | Mary Street, Dublin 1, Ireland [1] |
Number of locations
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over 290 stores [2][3] |
Area served
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United Kingdom, Ireland, Europe, and the USA [2] |
Key people
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Paul Marchant, CEO John Lyttle, COO Steve Lawton, Trading Director Jose Luis Martinez De Larramendi, Head of Spain and Portugal Division Julian Kilmartin, Buying and Merchandising Director [4] |
Products | Clothing Houseware Cosmetics |
Revenue | £5,347m (FY 2015) |
£673m (FY 2015) | |
Number of employees
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over 57,000 [5] |
Parent | Associated British Foods |
Website | primark |
Primark is an Irish clothing retailer operating in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland (branded as Penneys in Ireland), Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, the United States and Italy.[6][7] It was founded and headquartered in Dublin, Ireland. The company's international headquarters is registered in Ireland.[8] Its UK operations are registered in England and Wales.[9][10] Primark is a subsidiary of international food, ingredients and retail group Associated British Foods.
Contents
History
Primark was first opened by Arthur Ryan in June 1969 in Mary Street, Dublin under the name Penneys.[11] Further expansion and success in Ireland led to the move to the United Kingdom, and, in 1971, it opened a large store in Belfast City Centre before opening four out-of-town stores in England in 1973.[12] In October 2011, Primark opened its first concession model. Primark is now stocked in Selfridges department stores in Trafford Centre, Manchester, The Bull Ring, Birmingham and Oxford Street, London.[13]
In 1973, when it opened its first English store in Derby, the first store outside Ireland, it couldn't use the name "Penneys" because J. C. Penney had the name registered. The name "Primark" was then invented to use outside Ireland.[5]
Primark has corporate headquarters in Reading, Berkshire, United Kingdom and international headquarters in a redeveloped building in Dublin, Ireland, Arthur Ryan House, opened in 2015.[14][4]
Products
Primark offer a diverse range of products, including new born and kids clothing, womenswear, menswear, home ware, accessories, footwear, beauty products and confectionery. The company sells clothes at the low cost end of the market. Along with retailers such as Zara and H&M, Primark contributes to the contemporary fast fashion trend. According to an article about Primark in The Economist, "For many shoppers, Primark has an irresistible offer: trendy clothes at astonishingly low prices. The result is a new and even faster kind of fast fashion, which encourages consumers to buy heaps of items, discard them after a few wears and then come back for another batch of new outfits."[15]
Stores

Primark expanded rapidly in the UK in the mid-2000s. In 2005 they bought the Littlewoods chain for £409m,[16] retaining 40 of the 119 stores and selling the rest. They opened in the Meadowhall Centre in mid-2007.[17] In May 2006, the first Primark store outside Ireland and the UK opened in Madrid, Spain. In December 2008, Primark opened its first stores in the Netherlands, followed in 2009 by its first stores in Portugal, Germany and Belgium. Primark opened its first store in Austria on 27 September 2012 in Innsbruck, this was followed by another store in Vienna which opened in October 2012. The world's largest Primark store is located on Market Street, Manchester, England, occupying 155,000 sq ft (14,400 m2) of retail space across three floors.
Primark expanded to the United States in 2015 when it opened its first store in Downtown Crossing, Boston in the location that was once the flagship store of Filene's. The other American store is located at the King of Prussia Mall, the nation's second largest mall, near Philadelphia. They will be opening a third location in Willow Grove Park Mall, near Philadelphia this summer and a fourth location in Danbury Fair Mall in Danbury, CT.
Primark operates stores in the following countries:[citation needed]
Country | Number of stores |
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172 |
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41 |
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35 |
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20 |
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15 |
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9 |
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8 |
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4 |
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4 |
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2 |
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1 |
Controversies
Working practices
In 2006, Primark joined the Ethical Trading Initiative, a collaborative organisation bringing together businesses, trades unions and NGOs to work on labour rights issues in their supply chains.[18] ETI members commit to working towards the implementation of a code of conduct based on the International Labour Organisation's core conventions.
In December 2008, the UK charity War on Want launched a new report, Fashion Victims II, that showed conditions had not improved in Bangladeshi factories supplying Primark, two years after the charity first visited them.[19]
On 9 January 2009, a supplier was forced by ETI to remove its branding from Primark stores and websites following a BBC/The Observer investigation into the employment practices. The investigation alleged use of illegal immigrant labour and argued that the workers were paid less than the UK legal minimum wage.[20]
On 16 June 2011, the BBC Trust's Editorial Standards Committee (ESC) published its findings into a Panorama programme[21] 'Primark: On the Rack', broadcast in June 2008. The programme was an undercover investigative documentary examining poor working conditions in Indian factories supplying Primark. Although Primark subsequently stopped doing business with the Indian supplier, the ESC concluded that footage in the programme was 'more likely than not' to have been fabricated.[22] The ESC directed the BBC to make an on-air apology and to ensure that the programme was not repeated or sold to other broadcasters. Primark created a specific website to deal with the issues around the programme.[23]
In 2011 and 2012, Primark achieved ‘Leader’ status in the Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI).[24]
Building collapse at Savar
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On 24 April 2013, the eight-story Rana Plaza commercial building collapsed in Savar, a sub-district near Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. At least 1,127 people died and over 2,438 were injured.[25] The factory housed a number of separate garment factories employing around 5,000 people, several shops, and a bank,[26] and manufactured apparel for brands including the Benetton Group, Joe Fresh,[27] The Children's Place, Primark, Monsoon, and DressBarn.[28][29] Primark paid compensation and emergency aid to the victims of the collapse,[citation needed] a move which was welcomed by Oxfam,[30] and committed to review the structural integrity of buildings making its clothes.[31]
Of the 29 brands identified as having sourced products from the Rana Plaza factories, only 9 attended meetings held in November 2013 to agree a proposal on compensation to the victims. Several companies refused to sign, including Walmart, Carrefour, Bonmarché, Mango, Auchan and Kik. The agreement was signed by Primark, Loblaw, Bonmarche and El Corte Inglés.[32]
SOS Note
In June 2014, a customer from Ireland found an SOS note in the pocket of trousers she had bought from a Primark store in Belfast several years earlier.[33] The letter was written in Chinese and also contained a prison ID card. The letter alleged that the author was forced to work "like oxen" making fashion clothes for export for 15 hours per day, and the food they were given wouldn't be fit for dogs or pigs. A few days later, Primark claimed the label, and several others found in items in a store in Swansea, were a hoax.[34]
A year and a half later, yet another note was found in clothes from Primark.[35] Primark has not yet publicly stated whether they believe this to be part of the same hoax or part of a new hoax altogether.
References
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Further reading
- Wiggenraad, Philip, "In numbers: Primark's store growth as it plans overseas expansion", Retail Week, 10 July 2014
External links
Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons
- ↑ [1], [The Journal]. Retrieved 14 April 2016
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Snapshot: Primark Stores Limited", Bloomberg. Retrieved 11 February 2016
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 "A household Irish name built from humble beginnings: The Penneys story : It all began in Dublin’s fair city in 1969", The Journal (Ireland), March 1st 2015 (accessed 15 February 2016)
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- ↑ "Primark officially opens redeveloped Dublin HQ", RTE, Dublin, Ireland, Thursday 17 September 2015
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- ↑ Primark joins Ethical Trading Initiative - Press Release - ETI
- ↑ http://www.waronwant.org/campaigns/supermarkets/fashion-victims/inform/16360-fashion-victims-ii
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- ↑ http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctrust/news/press_releases/june/panorama.shtml
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- ↑ Factory Building Collapse in Bangladesh Kills 149 | Digital Wires from ENR.com | News McGraw-Hill Construction
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- Pages with reference errors
- Wikipedia pages with incorrect protection templates
- Use Irish English from July 2015
- All Wikipedia articles written in Irish English
- Use dmy dates from November 2015
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2016
- Articles with unsourced statements from April 2014
- 1969 establishments in Ireland
- Associated British Foods
- Clothing retailers of Ireland
- Companies established in 1969
- Irish brands