Vips (Mexican restaurant)

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Mexican logo (top) and Spanish logo (bottom)

Vips is a restaurant chain of casual full-service restaurants across Mexico and Spain founded by the Arango brothers and owned by Alsea, a Mexican hospitality and retail conglomerate. Visually and in the type and quality of service, they are similar to a U.S. "coffee shop" or diner such as Denny's, and compete with Sanborns, Toks and Wings with the format. The chain's restaurants are located in Mexico and Spain and operate in more than 70 cities and now has 260 restaurants serving around 9 million customers a year.[1][2][3]

History[edit]

A Mexican restaurant in 2015 with the former logo (top) and Spanish restaurant in 2005 (bottom)

The firm was founded in 1964 in Mexico City by brothers Jerónimo, Plácido and Manuel Arango (also founding owners of the hypermarket Aurrerá and the mass-market department store Suburbia), while they founded Vips in Spain – the birth country of the brothers' parents – in 1969, at the initiative of Plácido. At first, the restaurant was called VIP (an acronym for Very Important People) but as the public commonly called it "Vips", the firm later changed its name to it. The first restaurant was located in the neighborhood of Lomas de Sotelo in the exclusive area of Las Lomas, Mexico City. The chain expanded to Madero Street and Azcapotzalco then in 1974 outside of the city to Acapulco. In 1994 it merged with Walmart de México, which then sold Vips to Alsea in 2014 for 8.2 billion Mexican pesos.[1][2][3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Venta de Vips en España, la última prueba de la visión de los hermanos Arango ("Sale of Vips in Spain, ultimate test of the Arango Brothers' vision", in Spanish)". Arena Pública, el medio más libre de México · Economía, Negocios, Estilo, Tecnologías (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 November 2018.
  2. ^ a b "La marca Vips posee una participación de mercado del 12.3% en México" (The Vips brand has a 12.3% market share in Mexico", in Spanish), Opportimes, November 8, 2017
  3. ^ a b "Proceso de Alianza de grupo ZENA-ALSEA ("Process of alliance of the ZENA-ALSEA Group", in Spanish)".

External links[edit]