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In 1987 Tati was more visited than the Eiffel Tower

2020-07-09T20:34:47.477Z


THE FIGARO ARCHIVES - Tati closes its historic Paris store. The sign with the pink gingham logo was a real institution in the 1980s.


Nicknamed the “Galeries Lafayette du poor” by its founder Jules Ouaki, the discount brand closes its parent company on Boulevard Rochechouart in Paris. In 2019, out of more than 100 stores, thirteen stores had closed and the rest went under the Gifi flag.

Read also: The Tati store in Barbès, the brand's last with pink gingham, will close

An institution in the Barbès district in Paris, Tati, the latest "frippe veteran", "the big boxy foursome" goes out of business. Tati is a whole era, a true social phenomenon as evidenced by this report published in our columns in 1987.

Article published in Le Figaro of November 24, 1987

A Tati… sprawling

What is the "monument" of the most visited capital? The Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, the Arc de Triomphe? No, you're not there. The Parisian institution that sent thirty-five million visitors last year is called Tati, the big box store for four sous. The store with ineffable pink gingham bags that have turned good deals into a social phenomenon. The sprawling shops

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Source: lefigaro

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