The Alsterhaus is a five-story department store at
Jungfernstieg
The Jungfernstieg () is an urban promenade in Hamburg, Germany. It is the city's foremost boulevard.
Location
Jungfernstieg mostly lies within the quarter of Neustadt; however at its easternmost it stretches as far as Hamburg-Altstadt. In to ...
16–20 in
Hamburg
Hamburg (, ; ), officially the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg,. is the List of cities in Germany by population, second-largest city in Germany after Berlin and List of cities in the European Union by population within city limits, 7th-lar ...
that opened in 1912.
From 1994 to 2014 it was a branch of the department store group
Karstadt
Karstadt Warenhaus GmbH was a German department store chain whose headquarters were in Essen.
Until 30 September 2010 the company was a subsidiary of Arcandor, Arcandor AG (which was known until 30 June 2007 as KarstadtQuelle AG) and was respo ...
(as part of ''Karstadt Premium GmbH''), after which it was made a part of
KaDeWe Group KaDeWe Group GmbH is a group of three department stores in Germany with around 4,000 employees. It is owned by the Thai Central Group.
Stores
Operating
* Kaufhaus des Westens in Berlin
*Oberpollinger in Munich
*Alsterhaus in Hamburg
Future ...
GmbH together with
Oberpollinger
The Oberpollinger is a well-known upscale department store on Neuhauser Straße in Munich. It is run by ''KaDeWe Group GmbH'' (formerly Karstadt Premium GmbH) and is the largest department store in Southern Germany. The building was built ...
in Munich and the
KaDeWe
The , abbreviated to KaDeWe, is a Thai owned department store in Berlin, Germany. With over of retail space and more than 380,000 articles available, it is the second-largest department store in Europe after Harrods in London. It attracts 40,000 ...
in Berlin. The department store has a sales area of around and specializes in items such as
perfume
Perfume (, ) is a mixture of fragrance, fragrant essential oils or aroma compounds (fragrances), Fixative (perfumery), fixatives and solvents, usually in liquid form, used to give the human body, animals, food, objects, and living-spaces an agre ...
, accessories, clothing and
delicatessen
A delicatessen or deli is a grocery that sells a selection of fine, exotic, or foreign prepared foods. Delicatessens originated in Germany (contemporary spelling: ) during the 18th century and spread to the United States in the mid-19th centur ...
. On the fourth floor there is a Le-Buffet restaurant with a view of the
Binnenalster
Binnenalster () or Inner Alster Lake is one of two artificial lakes within the city limits of Hamburg, Germany, which are formed by the river Alster (the other being the Außenalster). The main annual festival is the ''Alstervergnügen''.
The la ...
.
It is open Monday to Saturday from 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. The Alsterhaus also has its own parking garage, which can be reached via Poststraße and Bei der Stadtwassermühle street.
History
The
Gera
Gera () is a city in the German state of Thuringia. With around 93,000 inhabitants, it is the third-largest city in Thuringia after Erfurt and Jena as well as the easternmost city of the ''Thüringer Städtekette'', an almost straight string of ...
merchant
Oscar Tietz opened the first branch of his department store
Hermann Tietz (Hertie) in Hamburg on March 1, 1897, on Großer Burstah with a wide range of products on textiles, food, furniture, carpets and books. He acquired a 5200 square meter area on
Jungfernstieg
The Jungfernstieg () is an urban promenade in Hamburg, Germany. It is the city's foremost boulevard.
Location
Jungfernstieg mostly lies within the quarter of Neustadt; however at its easternmost it stretches as far as Hamburg-Altstadt. In to ...
, which had developed into the first address in Hamburg. On the area where Scholviens Passage, the Hotel zum Kronprinzen and other houses were located, he built a new branch of his "Hermann Tietz department store", which opened on April 24, 1912.
The construction costs for the department store with an upscale range and furnishings such as marble and crystal chandeliers amounted to 4½ million gold
reichsmarks
The (; Currency sign, sign: ℛ︁ℳ︁; abbreviation: RM) was the currency of German Reich, Germany from 1924 until the fall of Nazi Germany in 1945, and in the Bizone, American, British and French occupied zones of Germany, until 20 June 19 ...
. The plans were drawn up by the architectural firm
Cremer & Wolffenstein, and Richard Jacobssen from Hamburg was in charge of construction. The property was previously secured with 5,000 oak posts that were driven into the soft earth on the banks of the Alster.
The time of National Socialism
In the economic crisis after 1929, sales at Tietz department stores fell by up to 46%.
The Aryanization of the department store was preceded by a liquidity bottleneck, which resulted in the refusal of a credit line that had already been promised in 1933. In March 1933, the managing directors, the brothers Georg and Martin Tietz, as well as their brother-in-law Hugo Zwillenberg, were presented with a debt relief plan, which ultimately led to the sale of the Tietz family's shares to Commerzbank, Deutsche and Dresdner Bank without direct government intervention ("cold
Aryanization
Aryanization () was the Nazi term for the seizure of property from Jews and its transfer to non-Jews, and the forced expulsion of Jews from economic life in Nazi Germany, Axis powers, Axis-aligned states, and their occupied territories. It enta ...
") led.
On July 24, 1933 the creditor banks founded the ''Hertie Kaufhaus-Beteiligungs-Gesellschaft m.b.H.'' (short : ''Hertie GmbH''). On July 29, 1933, the banking consortium forced the immediate resignation of
Hugo Zwillenberg from management and ownership with a formal inheritance law ''settlement agreement''. Instead, the banks appointed the textile department manager of ''Hermann Tietz OHG'',
Georg Karg, as a representative of ''Hertie GmbH'' with a 50,000
Reichsmark
The (; sign: ℛ︁ℳ︁; abbreviation: RM) was the currency of Germany from 1924 until the fall of Nazi Germany in 1945, and in the American, British and French occupied zones of Germany, until 20 June 1948. The Reichsmark was then replace ...
deposit as one of the managing director and
shareholder
A shareholder (in the United States often referred to as stockholder) of corporate stock refers to an individual or legal entity (such as another corporation, a body politic, a trust or partnership) that is registered by the corporation as the ...
of the department store group. ''Hertie GmbH'' came into being without any capital contribution of its own, but had a majority of votes among the shareholders. The Jewish Shareholders had to hand over their shares to ''Hertie GmbH'' and were reimbursed an amount of 1½ million Reichsmarks for their severely undervalued company assets of 21½ million Reichsmarks. The von Eglau, Neumann
and from Munzinger Archive circulated "AbfiHowever, the "foundation of twelve million marks" cannot be proven.
Two Aryan managers were appointed for the department stores. One of the two managing directors was
Georg Karg, who had previously been in charge of textile purchasing for the Tietz houses.
He acquired the shares from the banks in two installments during the war. The ''Hermann Tietz'' department store on Jungfernstieg was then given its current name ''Alsterhaus'' in 1935. (For more information see:
Expropriation of Tietz.)
Historians have found evidence that in 1943 and 1944 the Alsterhaus sold textiles that had been produced in the
Łódź Ghetto
The Łódź Ghetto or Litzmannstadt Ghetto (after the Nazi German name for Łódź) was a Nazi ghetto established by the German authorities for Polish Jews and Roma following the Invasion of Poland. It was the second-largest ghetto in all of ...
.
In 1949, the Tietz family tried to get their assets back and finally agreed to compensation in a settlement with the Hertie company by transferring ownership of the branches in Munich, Stuttgart and Karlsruhe. At this point in time, the Hertie Group still consisted of ten branches.
Development after the war
From 1948 to 1961, the Alsterhaus was the headquarters for the department store group ''Hertie'',
[Gisela Schütte]
-has-100-years-on-the-clock.html ''The Alsterhaus has 100 years on the clock''.
In: ''Die Welt
(, ) is a German national daily newspaper, published as a broadsheet by Axel Springer SE.
is the flagship newspaper of the Axel Springer publishing group and it is considered a newspaper of record in Germany. Its leading competitors are the ...
'', March 1, 2012. which was solely owned by the Karg family.
The Alsterhaus suffered only minor damage during the war and continued to be run as a full-range department store. Great importance was placed on a solid range of high quality.
At the end of the 1960s, Hertie acquired the property
Große Bleichen at the corner of Poststrasse, on which the Dyckhoff textile house store was located. A modern extension was built here with an additional entrance to the Alsterhaus.
In 1983, the Alsterhaus was completely renovated, lasting ten months and costing 50 million German marks.
In 1988, the music store
WOM (World of Music) moved into a sales area in the basement of the Alsterhaus. The branch was closed again in April 2004 during the renovation of the Alsterhaus after Karstadt divested itself of its stake in the company.
Takeover by Karstadt

In 1994, parts of the Hertie department stores, including the Alsterhaus, were taken over by
Karstadt
Karstadt Warenhaus GmbH was a German department store chain whose headquarters were in Essen.
Until 30 September 2010 the company was a subsidiary of Arcandor, Arcandor AG (which was known until 30 June 2007 as KarstadtQuelle AG) and was respo ...
. In the consolidated balance sheet of
Arcandor
Arcandor AG was a holding company located in Essen, Germany, that oversaw a number of companies operating in the businesses of mail order and internet shopping, department stores and tourism services. It was formed in 1999 by the merger of Karstad ...
it was last reported (2008) under the ''Karstadt Premium Group'' without mentioning detailed figures.
However, the owner of the Alsterhaus property remains the non-profit (foundation), Karstadt cannot therefore be independent decide on structural changes to the house.
The takeover resulted in strong influences on purchasing policy, which had previously been largely independently controlled by the company. These affected the range of goods. A little later, the premium product segment was partially abandoned and lower-priced items were added to the range, which was met with little customer acceptance.
A further step in the attempt to improve the profitability of the house was to reduce the product groups in the range. The areas of toys, books, electrical appliances, consumer electronics, carpets, furniture and household goods were completely abandoned.
Between 2003 and 2005, the Alsterhaus was completely rebuilt for around 35 million euros. The Hamburg architect Christian F. Heine was responsible for the plans. The facade on Jungfernstieg and on Poststrasse at the back was rebuilt and brought closer to the original designs. The interior was completely renovated and modernized. The large light shaft over all floors with the glass dome from the original building was not restored; instead there are now small atriums over two floors each and a small oval light shaft on all floors, high shop windows on Jungfernstieg that reach to the ground, and glass elevators are the most striking innovations. The new window front on the Alster with 7½ m high new windows is one of the highest in Germany.
Above the atriums there is a restaurant on the fourth floor, the ceiling of which was designed by Professor Dirk J. Breuer which also influenced the rest of the equipment during the renovation.
With the renovation, a strategy of a premium range with higher quality products in the smaller sales area was aimed for and consistently pursued. The depth of the product range will be reduced in individual remaining areas. The grocery department was significantly reduced and taken over exclusively by
shop-in-shop suppliers, the size of the haberdashery and fabric department for which the Alsterhaus was famous was significantly reduced.
A number of external companies received their own sales areas as part of the shop-in-shop system.
The part of the building on the corner of Poststrasse and Große Bleichen was spun off in 2003 and is now a branch of
Hennes & Mauritz (H&M) with access to the Alsterhaus on all floors.
After the takeover by
Signa Holding
Signa Holding GmbH (stylized SIGNA) is Austria's largest privately owned real estate company. Signa Holding GmbH announced insolvency proceedings at the end of November 2023. The company will apply for self-administration restructuring proceed ...
from the Austrian entrepreneur
René Benko, the houses of ''
Karstadt
Karstadt Warenhaus GmbH was a German department store chain whose headquarters were in Essen.
Until 30 September 2010 the company was a subsidiary of Arcandor, Arcandor AG (which was known until 30 June 2007 as KarstadtQuelle AG) and was respo ...
Premium GmbH'' were renamed ''The
KaDeWe Group KaDeWe Group GmbH is a group of three department stores in Germany with around 4,000 employees. It is owned by the Thai Central Group.
Stores
Operating
* Kaufhaus des Westens in Berlin
*Oberpollinger in Munich
*Alsterhaus in Hamburg
Future ...
'' in order to distinguish them from the rest, to separate Karstadt department stores, and to emphasize their affiliation with
KaDeWe
The , abbreviated to KaDeWe, is a Thai owned department store in Berlin, Germany. With over of retail space and more than 380,000 articles available, it is the second-largest department store in Europe after Harrods in London. It attracts 40,000 ...
. In June 2015, Signa sold the majority stake (50.1%) to the Italian department store chain
La Rinascente
; ) is a high-end Italian department store chain that operates nine stores in Italy, including two flagship locations in Milan ( Piazza del Duomo) and Rome (Via del Tritone).
The company was a member of the International Association of Depar ...
, which in turn is part of the Thai
Central Group
Central Group is a Thai multinational conglomerate founded by Tiang and Samrit Chirathivat in 1947, and still privately owned by the Chirathivat family . Its publicly-traded subsidiaries include Central Retail, Central Pattana (commercial re ...
.
Central Group took over 100% of the KaDeWe Group that Alsterhaus is part of in 2024.
References
{{coord, 53.5531, 9.9918, type:landmark_region:DE, display=title
Department stores of Germany
Companies owned by Central Group
Companies based in Hamburg
Buildings and structures in Hamburg-Mitte
KaDeWe Group