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Nontraditional franchise locations outside the U.S. and Canada often end up in unusual places for unusual reasons and must fit into the space available. Often the size of space is smaller than the U.S. model, and the floor plan has to adapt to strange sizes. Here’s a look at some nontraditional international franchise locations:
Over the years, Build-A-Bear Workshop has operated stores in major tourist locations, including Downtown Disney. Two of the most famous stores outside the U.S. and Canada are in Copenhagen in the Tivoli Gardens, the world’s second-oldest amusement park. There is also a large Build-A-Bear Workshop store in the famous Shanghai Disneyland Park.
In Manila in the Philippines, there are twelve Randy’s Donuts shops. On a busy street corner in downtown Manila is a miniature kiosk version with a large donut on top, similar to the original Randy’s Donuts shop with the 30-foot-wide donut on top near Los Angeles International Airport.
Several years ago, my company helped Round Table Pizza enter the Middle East. The licensee had a global construction company that was building a new town near the capital city, Ulaanbaatar. They opened a wildly successful Round Table Pizza restaurant that was the only Western F&B brand in the country at the time.
In the 1990s, the AlphaGraphics quick-print chain opened its first store in China in the basement of the World Trade Center in Beijing. It took 10 Chinese people to carry a 2,000-pound Xerox digital print machine down two sets of escalators to the store basement because it was too long to fit in the elevators.
In Dortmund, Germany, a Subway restaurant was built inside a former church. The building retains many original architectural features, including stained-glass windows, giving it a unique ambiance quite different from the typical Subway location.
A Taco Bell on a floating barge in Dubai provides a novel dining experience with views of the Dubai Fountain and the Burj Khalifa.
In Barcelona, a Dunkin’ shop is located in one of the city’s historic buildings, featuring traditional Catalan architectural elements, blending the old with the new in an unusual setting.
Near the Giza pyramid complex in Cairo, Egypt, there’s a KFC location, along with other QSR chains, where visitors can enjoy modern fast food while gazing at the ancient pyramids.
A McDonald’s in an airplane in Taupo, New Zealand, is known as the “McPlane.” This McDonald’s restaurant is housed inside a decommissioned DC-3 airplane, offering a novel dining experience with an intact cockpit for visitors to explore.
Starbucks adapted a centuries-old Japanese teahouse in Kyoto, Japan, preserving its traditional design elements, such as tatami mats and wooden décor, to offer a serene and culturally immersive coffee-drinking experience.
Never underestimate the ingenuity of franchisees worldwide! Where there is a will there is a way.
William (Bill) Edwards, CEO of Edwards Global Services (EGS), has five decades of helping more than 40 companies successfully expand their businesses to other countries. Having lived and worked in virtually every corner of the world and across 12 business sectors, he is uniquely qualified to steer senior executives successfully through the complexities of taking their businesses global. Download the EGS quarterly GlobalVue country ranking chart at edwardsglobal.com/globalvue. Subscribe to his biweekly global business update newsletter at insider.edwardsglobal.com. Contact him to discuss taking your franchise global at +1-949-375-1896 and bedwards@edwardsglobal.com.