After a merger in 2004 with Beijing New Yansha Group, Quanjude is now a part of the
Beijing Tourism Group, a
state-owned enterprise. The company's stock is listed on the
Shanghai stock exchange. The first directly run flagship store opened in Changchun, Jilin Province in January 2007.
Beijing street in Beijing Quanjude has eight direct branches in Beijing. The original location operates in
Qianmen with several other branches in other locations in Beijing. There is a seven-story restaurant on Hepingmen Ave., a location hand-picked by former
Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai. Serving up to 5,000 meals a day, this restaurant covers a floor area of 15,000 square meters with over forty private dining rooms and can simultaneously seat 2,000 guests. Having established a history and affiliation with the
Chinese government at the municipal and central state level, Quanjude has often been used to hold state banquets and to receive
celebrities, dignitaries, and important government figures from over 200 countries as distinguished
VIP guests.
Outside China The Quanjude restaurants outside China opened in
Bremen,
Los Angeles and
Guam in 1994. In 2004, the first QJD restaurant in Japan (Japanese:
Zenshutoku) opened in
Tokyo. In
Canada, QJD operates restaurants in
Toronto,
Vancouver, and
Ottawa; of note, the Vancouver restaurant received a
Michelin Star in 2022, and the Ottawa restaurant is simply called "Peking Duck" for unknown reasons. In June 2025, a new location, also called iDen & Quanjude, opened on the
Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York, in the old
Le Grenouille location. The restaurant space was bought for $14.2 million and was opened by the same people who own the Vancouver Michelin-starred location. == History ==