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Samcheong-dong, Garosugil emerging as hot spots for beauty shoppers

Seoul’s Samcheong-dong and Garosugil, prized for their eclectic cafes and small fashion boutiques, were relatively unknown to beauty shoppers from overseas. That may soon change.

Both are rising as the new hot spots in Seoul for foreign tourists, set to rival the current top district Myeong-dong.

Belport in Garosugil
Belport in Garosugil

Samcheong-dong, north of Myeong-dong, has seen some 10 large-scale cosmetics businesses open since 2011.

Innisfree Jeju House, a cosmetics store and organic cafe owned by beauty conglomerate AmorePacific, opened in Samcheong-dong last year.

Innisfree Jeju House in Samcheong-dong
Innisfree Jeju House in Samcheong-dong

The district also saw a new branch of British cosmetics brand Neal’s Yard and the flagship store of makeup brand Moonshot, owned by Korean management powerhouse YG Entertainment.

Garosugil, a shopping high-street that stretches some 700 meters from Sinsa Station to Sinsa Middle School, is also seeing large cosmetics enterprises open stores in quick succession.

The district currently houses some 20 cosmetics stores, seven of which opened their doors as recently as last year.

Health and beauty retailer LOHB, owned by Lotte Co., ousted its rival Olive Young from a building at the entrance to Garosugil. Olive Young was pushed into the first floor of adjacent building CJ Garosu Town, which is packed with other subsidiaries of CJ Corp.

VDL in Samcheong-dong
VDL in Samcheong-dong

Beauty empire AmorePacific has also targeted Garosugil, opening well-known cosmetics brands Espoir and Aritaum outlets in February and December, respectively.

Conglomerate LG Household & Health Care will also open its first exclusive store for premium cosmetics brand Whoo, which was previously only available in department stores, in the area on Friday.

The personal care and cosmetics producer already has stores in Garosugil for cosmetics brands SU:M37 and The Face Shop.

Foreign shoppers are the majority in both Samcheong-dong and Garosugil, staff at the shops said.

Staff from Garosugil’s SU:M37 said Chinese tourists have comprised 80 percent of its sales since the store opened in September, and it continues to target foreign customers.

Officials of well-known cosmetics brand The Face Shop, also owned by LG Household & Health Care, said foreign shoppers comprised over 60 percent of their sales, with about a third of all customers coming from China.

“Sales have quadrupled in the first quarter this year, due to foreign shoppers including those from China, since the same period last year,” said a staff member at Olive Young in Garosugil.

But with the rise of large-scale fashion and cosmetics companies advancing into the area, the smaller cafes and boutiques for which the district was known are being pushed out of business.

“Large-scale enterprises tend to borrow whole buildings, which is preferred by landlords over smaller businesses that only rent single floors,” said a coffee house owner surnamed Kim.

Kim, about 37, was forced to move his business twice into alleyways due to soaring rent prices, before being forced to pack it in altogether.

By Yoon Sarah (sarah356@heraldcorp.com)
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