-berniat lebih baik dari berimpian-
Since I have read most that we have now need to write down our dreams (impian) in the motivators' way. I agree with that, as from before til now I believe in
1) wish (mohon)
2) want and admit that I want (mahu dan mengaku mahu),
3) pray that be granted and act like already achieved (mendoakan supaya makbul dan membawa diri seperti layak memiliki).
As before I always say "admire fire up desire" berminat membangkit kehendak" it is almost like it is but more add up with rules this time.
so I admire Famous Amos but love most Harrods.
This is what I want to get and only Allah knows behind it and how. Got me and set yours too :)
Source from Wikipedia
Harrods
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harrods is an upmarket
department store located in
Brompton Road in
Knightsbridge, in the
Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea,
London. The Harrods
brand also applies to other enterprises undertaken by the Harrods group of companies including
Harrods Bank,
Harrods Estates,
Harrods Aviation and
Air Harrods, and to
Harrods Buenos Aires, sold by Harrods in 1922 and closed as of 2011, with plans announced to reopen in 2013.
[1]
The store occupies a 5-acre (20,000 m
2) site and has over one million square feet (
90,000 m2) of selling space in over 330 departments making it the biggest department store in Europe. The UK's second-biggest shop,
Selfridges, Oxford Street, is a little over half the size with 540,000 square feet (50,000 m
2) of selling space.,
[2] while the third largest,
Allders of Croydon had 500,000 square feet (46,000 m
2) of retail space. By comparison Europe's second-largest department store the
KaDeWe in Berlin has a retail space of 650,000 square feet (60,000 m
2).
The Harrods motto is
Omnia Omnibus Ubique—
All Things for All People, Everywhere. Several of its departments, including the seasonal Christmas department and the Food Hall, are world famous.
History
Fashion plate of 1909 shows wealthy Londoners walking in front of Harrods
Harrods founder
Charles Henry Harrod first established his business in 1824, aged 25. The business was located south of the River Thames in
Southwark.
The premises were located at 228 Borough High Street. He ran this
business, variously listed as a draper, mercer and a haberdasher,
certainly until 1831.
[3][4][5] During 1825 the business was listed as 'Harrod and Wicking, Linen Drapers, Retail',
[6] but this partnership was dissolved at the end of that year.
[7]
His first grocery business appears to be as ‘Harrod & Co.Grocers’
at 163 Upper Whitecross Street, Clerkenwell, E.C.1., in 1832.
[8] In 1834 in London's
East End, he established a wholesale grocery in
Stepney,
at 4, Cable Street, with a special interest in tea. In 1849, to escape
the vice of the inner city and to capitalise on trade to the
Great Exhibition of 1851 in nearby
Hyde Park, Harrod took over a small shop in the district of
Brompton, on the site of the current store. Beginning in a single room employing two assistants and a messenger boy, Harrod's son
Charles Digby Harrod
built the business into a thriving retail operation selling medicines,
perfumes, stationery, fruit and vegetables. Harrods rapidly expanded,
acquired the adjoining buildings, and employed one hundred people by
1880.
However, the store's booming fortunes were reversed in early December
1883, when it burnt to the ground. Remarkably, in view of this
calamity, Charles Harrod fulfilled all of his commitments to his
customers to make Christmas deliveries that year—and made a record
profit in the process. In short order, a new building was built on the
same site, and soon Harrods extended credit for the first time to its
best customers, among them
Oscar Wilde,
Lillie Langtry,
Ellen Terry,
Charlie Chaplin,
Noël Coward,
Gertrude Lawrence,
Laurence Olivier and
Vivien Leigh,
Sigmund Freud,
A. A. Milne, and many members of the
British Royal Family.
On Wednesday, 16 November 1898, Harrods debuted England's first "moving staircase" (
escalator)
in their Brompton Road stores; the device was actually a woven leather
conveyor belt-like unit with a mahogany and "silver plate-glass"
balustrade.
[9] Nervous customers were offered
brandy at the top to revive them after their 'ordeal'. The department store was purchased by the Fayed brothers in 1985.
[10]