Peter Jones (department store)

View of the building.

Peter Jones is a large department store in central London. It is owned by John Lewis Partnership and located in Sloane Square, Chelsea.

History

The shop is named after Peter Rees Jones (1842–1905), the son of a Carmarthenshire hat manufacturer.

After serving an apprenticeship with a draper in Cardigan he moved to London and established a small shop in Marylebone Lane. He then moved to central London, and in 1877 moved to 4–6 Kings Road the site of the present store. The business flourished, soon expanding to cover most of the block.

After a period of troubled trading and the death of Peter Jones, the store was purchased by John Lewis of the eponymous Oxford Street store, who handed it over to his son John Spedan Lewis in 1914. Soon after it became part of the John Lewis profit sharing partnership.

The present building, which occupies an entire island site on the west side of Sloane Square, was built between 1932 and 1936 to designs by William Crabtree of the firm of Slater, Crabtree and Moberly.[1] The building is the first modern-movement use of the glass curtain wall in Britain (not, as is often claimed, the first per se, as late-Victorian examples in the gothic revival style exist) and is now a Grade II* listed building.

The store completed a lengthy refurbishment by John McAslan and Partners in 2004.[2]

Tony Wheeler was appointed managing director of the store in 2011.[3]

References

  1. "Peter Jones, Sloane Square, London". The modern shop: architecture & shopping between the wars. Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 15 August 2011. External link in |work= (help)
  2. Glancey, Jonathan (14 June 2004). "Escalator to Heaven". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-04-04.
  3. Peter Jones website shop information, accessed 29 June 2011
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Coordinates: 51°29′32″N 0°09′32″W / 51.4922°N 0.1590°W / 51.4922; -0.1590


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