How to Apply to Klépierre

15 min read Last updated April 20, 2026 26 open positions

Key Takeaways

  • Apply on klepierre.com/en/our-talents (and the underlying Oracle Cloud Recruiting backend at fa-ewfm-saasfaprod1.fa.ocs.oraclecloud.com) — that is the single canonical channel, and third-party reposts are often outdated.
  • Mirror the Klépierre and EPRA vocabulary literally in your CV (GLA, MGR, OCR, NRI, EPRA earnings, EPRA NAV, like-for-like, BREEAM, GRESB) — the Oracle parser and recruiter searches are keyword-literal.
  • Lead with retail real estate pedigree if you have it — Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Carmila, Mercialys, Hammerson, ECE, Sonae Sierra, NEPI, IGD, and the Big-Three brokerage retail teams are pre-qualified in recruiters' eyes.
  • Submit a French CV and lettre de motivation for Paris HQ roles even if you are bilingual — French is the working language at 26 boulevard des Capucines.
  • Treat European mobility as a career accelerator: state explicitly which sites, countries, and languages you would accept, because Klépierre runs a 'one-platform' model across France, Italy, Iberia, Scandinavia, the Netherlands, Germany, and Central Europe.
  • For early-career: alternance, stage (internship), and VIE (Volontariat International en Entreprise) at Steen & Strøm or the Italian/Iberia platforms are the highest-conversion entry paths.
  • Be ready to discuss retail-cycle risk honestly — interviewers know that physical retail is cyclical and that tenant concentration on Inditex, H&M, and a handful of specialty groups is a real exposure; candidates who acknowledge it without panic are taken more seriously.
  • Bring genuine sustainability literacy — Act4Good® and the GRESB number-one positioning are real internally, not marketing veneer, and BREEAM / CSRD / EU Taxonomy fluency is increasingly expected across functions.
  • Validate right-to-work upfront for the country of posting; Klépierre rarely sponsors visas for non-specialist roles and the Passeport Talent route is reserved for scarce profiles.

About Klépierre

Klépierre SA (Euronext Paris: LI; ISIN FR0000121964) is the European leader in shopping malls and the second-largest mall operator on the continent after Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield. The group was formed in 1990 when Compagnie Foncière (a property arm associated with BNP Paribas heritage) reorganised its retail assets, and it became one of the first French Sociétés d'Investissements Immobiliers Cotées (SIIC, the French REIT regime) when that statute was created in 2003. The SIIC structure remains foundational: Klépierre distributes the bulk of its rental income as a tax-transparent dividend, which anchors the equity story for the European real-estate-investor base. Headquartered at 26 boulevard des Capucines in the Opéra district of Paris (with a secondary corporate site at 'Tower Klépierre' supporting global functions), the company employs roughly 1,100 people across 12 continental European countries — France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, and a residual Turkish presence wound down through asset sales — and runs a portfolio of roughly 70 dominant retail destinations valued at more than €21 billion as of 31 December 2025, attracting more than 720 million visits per year. The shareholder register is the second defining fact about Klépierre. Simon Property Group, the New York Stock Exchange-listed US mall giant (NYSE: SPG), acquired a 28.7% stake from BNP Paribas in March 2012 in a €1.5 billion transaction and remains the reference shareholder with approximately 22% of capital as of 2025; ADIA (Abu Dhabi Investment Authority) has been a long-standing institutional holder, alongside the Dutch pension administrator APG (which is also Klépierre's joint-venture partner in Steen & Strøm, the Scandinavian platform Klépierre controls at 56.1% with APG at 43.9%); BlackRock and Norges Bank Investment Management round out the institutional base. The remaining roughly 78% is free-float, mainly held by European and US institutional investors and tracked by the major real-estate indices (EPRA NAREIT Developed Europe, GPR 250). Klépierre's flagship assets define the brand: Val d'Europe in Serris adjacent to Disneyland Paris (drawing nearly 19 million annual visitors and benefiting from a captive tourist catchment), Hoog Catharijne in Utrecht (the Netherlands' busiest shopping centre at roughly 30 million visits per year, integrated with the central railway station), Créteil Soleil and Saint-Lazare Paris in the Paris region, Porta di Roma and Le Gru in Italy, La Gavia and Plenilunio in Madrid, Field's in Copenhagen, and Emporia in Malmö. The major tenants on the rent roll are the global specialty-retail anchors that drive footfall in modern European malls: the Inditex stable (Zara, Bershka, Pull&Bear, Stradivarius, Massimo Dutti), H&M Group, Apple, Sephora, LVMH and Kering accessory banners, JD Sports, Primark, Decathlon, MediaMarkt-Saturn, and the local food-and-beverage operators that have replaced lost department-store anchors. Recent financial performance reflects the post-COVID retail rebound: 2025 EPRA earnings rose roughly 5%, EPRA NAV per share rose about 9.5% to €35.9, and the executive board proposed a €1.90 cash dividend per share for 2025 (3% year-on-year increase), with management guidance signalling continued growth into 2026 and a one-year total accounting return of about 15%. The Act4Good® strategy, launched in February 2023 as the formal evolution of the earlier 'Act for Good' programme, anchors Klépierre's positioning as a sustainability leader: net-zero by 2030, GRESB number-one ranking in the European listed retail real estate category for several consecutive years, CDP 'A' for climate, and inclusion in the CAC 40 ESG index. The honest counterweights candidates should weigh: retail real estate is structurally cyclical and exposed to consumer-spending shocks; tenant concentration risk is real with Inditex, H&M, and a handful of global specialty groups dominating the rent roll; and the Turkish exit, several non-core European disposals, and the slow grind of post-COVID reletting at older centres are still working through the portfolio.

Application Process

  1. 1
    Browse openings on the official portal at klepierre

    Browse openings on the official portal at klepierre.com/en/our-talents (and the French equivalent /nos-talents), which links into the Oracle Cloud Recruiting candidate experience hosted on fa-ewfm-saasfaprod1.fa.ocs.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/CandidateExperience — that Oracle HCM domain is the actual ATS where you create your account and submit applications.

  2. 2
    Create a candidate account in Oracle Cloud Recruiting, upload a CV in PDF format

    Create a candidate account in Oracle Cloud Recruiting, upload a CV in PDF format (one to two pages, single column, plain text-friendly so the Oracle parser extracts cleanly), and complete the structured profile fields including work history, education, languages with CEFR levels, and right-to-work status; the parser is reliable but recruiters search the structured fields, not the uploaded file.

  3. 3
    Submit your application; for Paris HQ and other France-based roles attach a Fren

    Submit your application; for Paris HQ and other France-based roles attach a French lettre de motivation alongside your CV (English-only is read as a soft signal that you are not yet committed to working in French), and for site-based mall manager (directeur de centre) and operations roles in Italy, Spain, Scandinavia, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, or Czechia the application is routed to the local country HR team via the same Oracle backend.

  4. 4
    Recruiter screen of 30-45 minutes by phone or Microsoft Teams with a Klépierre t

    Recruiter screen of 30-45 minutes by phone or Microsoft Teams with a Klépierre talent acquisition partner (Paris HQ for corporate roles, country HR for site roles), focused on motivation, mobility across the European footprint, languages, salary expectations, and right-to-work confirmation (EU citizenship, French Passeport Talent / Carte Bleue Européenne, or country-equivalent permit).

  5. 5
    Hiring-manager interview, typically 45-60 minutes, exploring technical depth, re

    Hiring-manager interview, typically 45-60 minutes, exploring technical depth, retail real-estate experience, and fit with the relevant function — Asset Management, Leasing & Specialty Leasing, Development, Operations, Property Management, Finance, Investor Relations, Sustainability (Act4Good®), Marketing & Customer Experience, Legal, IT/Data, or Group Functions.

  6. 6
    Functional or panel round: leasing candidates face case-style discussions on ten

    Functional or panel round: leasing candidates face case-style discussions on tenant pipelines, GLA (gross leasable area), MGR (minimum guaranteed rent) versus turnover rent, OCR (occupancy cost ratio) negotiation, and anchor versus specialty mix; asset managers face NRI (net rental income), like-for-like growth, EPRA reporting, valuation drivers, and capex prioritisation; finance candidates face EPRA NAV bridges, SIIC distribution mechanics, debt covenants, and IFRS 16 lease accounting.

  7. 7
    For Paris HQ and senior or director-level roles, an additional formal HR (Ressou

    For Paris HQ and senior or director-level roles, an additional formal HR (Ressources Humaines) interview reviews compensation grid placement under the convention collective de l'immobilier, mobility and expatriate terms, CSE (comité social et économique) considerations, and a final interview with the relevant Executive Committee member or business-line Director closes the loop; offer letters (promesses d'embauche) are then issued in writing with a CDI permanent contract, bonus, and benefits clearly specified.


Resume Tips for Klépierre

recommended

Submit a bilingual French/English profile for Paris HQ roles — a French CV with

Submit a bilingual French/English profile for Paris HQ roles — a French CV with a parallel English version, plus a French lettre de motivation — because the working language at 26 boulevard des Capucines is French-first with English used in cross-country forums, board materials, and analyst calls.

recommended

Lead with retail real estate pedigree explicitly: prior employment at Unibail-Ro

Lead with retail real estate pedigree explicitly: prior employment at Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Carmila, Mercialys, Hammerson, ECE, Sonae Sierra, NEPI Rockcastle, IGD, Eurocommercial, CBRE/JLL/Cushman & Wakefield retail teams, or top-tier tenant-side leasing teams (Inditex, H&M, JD Sports expansion teams) is the single strongest signal Klépierre recruiters look for, even for adjacent roles.

recommended

Use the Klépierre and EPRA vocabulary in your CV — GLA (gross leasable area), MG

Use the Klépierre and EPRA vocabulary in your CV — GLA (gross leasable area), MGR (minimum guaranteed rent), turnover rent, OCR (occupancy cost ratio), NRI (net rental income), EPRA earnings, EPRA NAV / NTA, like-for-like growth, footfall, retailer sales density, anchor versus specialty, ESCDA (European Shopping Centre Digital Awards) — when you have relevant experience, because the Oracle parser and recruiter searches are keyword-literal.

recommended

For asset management and leasing roles, quantify in retail real estate units: GL

For asset management and leasing roles, quantify in retail real estate units: GLA managed (m²), number of leases signed per year, occupancy rate, average MGR uplift on renewal, footfall growth, retailer sales density (€/m²), tenant retention rate, and the value of the portfolio managed in millions of euros.

recommended

List language proficiency on the CEFR scale (A1 to C2): French C1+ effectively r

List language proficiency on the CEFR scale (A1 to C2): French C1+ effectively required for Paris HQ corporate roles, English B2+ mandatory globally for any cross-country project, Italian C1+ for Milan and the Italian asset-management team, Spanish C1+ for Madrid, Dutch B2+ for Hoog Catharijne and the NL platform, and a Scandinavian language (Norwegian, Swedish, or Danish) for Steen & Strøm roles based in Oslo, Stockholm, or Copenhagen.

recommended

For development, sustainability, and technical roles surface specific frameworks

For development, sustainability, and technical roles surface specific frameworks: BREEAM In-Use and BREEAM New Construction certifications (Klépierre targets BREEAM Excellent on developments), GRESB (Klépierre is the European retail leader several years running), CRREM (Carbon Risk Real Estate Monitor) pathway compliance, EU Taxonomy alignment, CSRD reporting, SBTi-validated net-zero targets, and energy-management systems such as ISO 50001.

recommended

Confirm right-to-work upfront for the country of the posting: EU/EEA citizenship

Confirm right-to-work upfront for the country of the posting: EU/EEA citizenship for French/Italian/Spanish/Portuguese/Dutch/German/Polish/Czech roles, Norwegian residence permit or EEA right for Norway, Swedish/Danish equivalents for Steen & Strøm sites, and clearly state mobility — Klépierre runs a 'one-platform' European career model and accepting cross-country assignments is a recognised accelerator into Group Functions and Executive Committee track.

recommended

For early-career: state your French grande école, university Master's, MSc in Re

For early-career: state your French grande école, university Master's, MSc in Real Estate (ESSEC IMBA, ESCP, HEC, ESSEC, Bocconi, IE Madrid, Reading, Cass/Bayes), or RICS APC pathway clearly, and target the dedicated Klépierre alternance, stage (internship), and VIE listings on the careers portal — these are the highest-conversion entry routes.



Interview Culture

Klépierre interviews carry the formality of French corporate culture overlaid on the technical specificity of property finance and retail real estate.

Expect a structured, hierarchical, and unhurried process — addressing French interviewers as vous throughout, dressing in business attire (suit and tie or equivalent) for in-person interviews at boulevard des Capucines, arriving punctually, and treating every line on your CV as a load-bearing claim that will be probed in detail. The first conversation is usually with a Talent Acquisition partner from the Paris HQ HR team (or the country HR lead for site-based roles), 30 to 45 minutes, conducted in the language of the posting; for Paris HQ corporate roles the conversation is almost always in French, with a short English switch to verify your fluency for cross-country work. Hiring-manager and technical rounds are substantive: leasing candidates will be asked to walk through a hypothetical specialty-leasing pipeline for a centre like Val d'Europe or Hoog Catharijne, defending MGR positioning against a tenant's OCR target and explaining how you would balance Inditex-anchor renewal economics against the introduction of a new F&B or experiential operator; asset managers face EPRA-style questions on like-for-like NRI bridges, capex prioritisation between a refurbishment and an extension, and how to defend the appraised value to the external valuers (Cushman & Wakefield, JLL, BNP Paribas Real Estate); finance candidates face SIIC distribution mechanics, IFRS 16 treatment of lease incentives, EPRA NAV/NTA reconciliation, and questions on the LTV ratio, ICR (interest coverage ratio), and the specific covenant headroom on the group's bond programme. Behavioural questioning leans on the STAR format with a strongly French inflection: rigueur (rigour), esprit d'analyse, esprit d'équipe, and the ability to operate in a multinational, multi-cultural matrix are tested explicitly, and candidates should be ready to discuss CSR and sustainability authentically because Act4Good® is taken seriously inside the company and is referenced in compensation scorecards. The cultural divide between Paris HQ and the site-based mall managers (directeurs de centre and operations teams across the 70-plus malls) is real and important: HQ runs strategy, capital allocation, leasing standards, and group functions; the centres run day-to-day operations, footfall delivery, tenant relationships, marketing campaigns, and customer experience under a director who often has decades of retail-property operational depth. Candidates aiming at site-based roles should expect interviews with the country managing director and the regional asset director, with strong weight given to operational pragmatism, tenant-relationship instincts, and practical knowledge of national retail-leasing law (the French baux commerciaux, Italian locazione commerciale, Spanish arrendamientos urbanos commercial regimes). France-based and most other European roles operate within statutory works-council frameworks (the French CSE — comité social et économique, Dutch ondernemingsraad, German Betriebsrat); this means hiring decisions, organisational changes, and contract terms move on a slower, more consultative cadence than US norms, and silence between rounds is not disinterest. Salary discussions are direct but tightly framed by collective-agreement (convention collective nationale de l'immobilier) grids in France and equivalent national agreements abroad; meaningful negotiation is possible at the senior-manager and director bands, while early-career and graduate hires are anchored to grid bands. Final-round Executive Committee or business-line Director interviews carry weight: candidates should be able to articulate a thesis on the future of European physical retail (post-COVID rebound, e-commerce-resilient categories, the rise of experiential and F&B, the CSR investor lens) without lapsing into generic consultant-speak.

What Klépierre Looks For

  • Retail real-estate domain depth — prior experience at a peer mall operator (Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Carmila, Mercialys, Hammerson, ECE, Sonae Sierra, NEPI Rockcastle, IGD, Eurocommercial), tenant-side expansion team (Inditex, H&M, JD Sports), or a top-tier brokerage retail capital-markets desk (CBRE, JLL, Cushman & Wakefield, BNP Paribas Real Estate) is the single strongest pre-qualifier.
  • Property finance literacy — EPRA reporting standards, SIIC distribution mechanics, IFRS for real estate (IFRS 16 leases, IAS 40 investment property), EPRA NAV / NTA bridge construction, LTV and ICR covenant management, and external valuation methodology (DCF, yield, comparable transactions).
  • Bilingual French and English at minimum for HQ and most cross-country roles, with Italian, Spanish, Dutch, or a Scandinavian language as accelerators for the relevant country teams; trilingual French/English/Italian or French/English/Spanish is genuinely valuable for Group Asset Management and senior leasing roles.
  • Diploma profile recognised by the French and European real-estate market — grande école d'ingénieur or de commerce (HEC, ESSEC, ESCP, Polytechnique, Centrale, Mines), MSc Real Estate from ESSEC IMBA, ESCP MRES, Reading (UK), Bocconi or top-tier European universities, complemented where relevant by RICS APC chartered status.
  • EU right-to-work for European postings (or appropriate Passeport Talent / Carte Bleue Européenne for non-EU specialists for France) — visa sponsorship is selective and reserved for genuinely scarce skill profiles, not routine for general management or commercial roles.
  • Willingness to relocate across Klépierre's European footprint — careers visibly accelerate for asset managers, leasing leaders, and country directors who accept assignments across France, Italy, Iberia, Scandinavia (Steen & Strøm), the Netherlands, Germany, and Central Europe.
  • Authentic sustainability and customer-experience mindset — Act4Good® and the CSR / GRESB number-one positioning are central to the investor narrative and to internal compensation scorecards; candidates whose work history shows credible BREEAM, EU Taxonomy, CSRD, and net-zero project experience stand out.
  • Operational pragmatism for site-based roles — directeur de centre, operations, marketing, and customer-experience candidates need a track record of running a physical retail destination day-to-day, including tenant-relationship management, footfall and conversion optimisation, security and compliance, and event-led marketing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What ATS does Klépierre use, and what does that mean for my application?
Klépierre uses Oracle Cloud Recruiting (Oracle HCM Cloud, formerly known under the Oracle Taleo and Oracle Recruiting brands), with the candidate experience hosted on fa-ewfm-saasfaprod1.fa.ocs.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/CandidateExperience and surfaced through the careers section at klepierre.com/en/our-talents. Oracle HCM is enterprise-grade and parses standard CVs reliably, but it scores candidates on literal keyword matches against the job description and on the structured profile fields you fill in. Practical implications: submit a clean single-column PDF (no fancy two-column templates that confuse parsers), complete the full profile rather than relying solely on the uploaded CV, mirror the exact terminology of the job description (GLA, MGR, OCR, NRI, EPRA NAV, BREEAM, GRESB, Act4Good), and use the saved-search and job-alert features because new requisitions across all 12 European countries post centrally to this one portal.
What does Klépierre pay in France for asset management, leasing, and finance roles?
France figures are indicative because public salary data on Klépierre is thin. Junior asset managers and analysts (école de commerce or MSc Real Estate graduate, 0-3 years) typically land at €40-55K base plus 5-15% bonus; mid-level asset managers and leasing managers (3-7 years) €55-85K plus 10-20% bonus; senior asset managers, senior leasing managers, and finance managers (7-12 years) €85-130K plus 15-25% bonus and increasing long-term incentive exposure; directors and Heads of function €130-200K-plus with structured LTI and bonus targets aligned to EPRA earnings, NAV, and Act4Good® scorecard metrics. Site-based directeurs de centre (mall managers) for major assets like Val d'Europe, Créteil Soleil, or Hoog Catharijne typically sit at €90-160K with operational bonus tied to footfall, NRI, and customer-satisfaction KPIs. Treat these as ranges, not quotes — actual offers depend on role scope, prior experience, and the convention collective de l'immobilier grid placement.
Do I need to speak French to work at Klépierre?
Yes for Paris HQ at 26 boulevard des Capucines and most France-based corporate, finance, legal, IR, and group-function roles — professional working French (CEFR C1+) is effectively required and the working-language reality is French-first with English used in cross-country forums, board materials, and analyst calls. No for the international platforms: Italian sites in Italian, Spanish/Portuguese sites in Spanish/Portuguese, Dutch sites in Dutch, Steen & Strøm Scandinavian sites in Norwegian/Swedish/Danish, German in German, Polish in Polish, Czech in Czech. For multi-country group asset management and senior leasing roles bilingual French/English is the de-facto floor; trilingual profiles are genuinely valuable. Site-based directeur de centre and operations roles require fluency in the local-country language regardless of HQ-language profile.
What is the work-permit reality for non-EU candidates targeting Paris HQ?
For French postings, non-EU/EEA candidates need a work permit. Klépierre uses the Passeport Talent (specifically the 'Salarié Qualifié' or 'Carte Bleue Européenne' variant) for senior asset managers, finance specialists, and other scarce profiles, requiring a Master's degree or equivalent and a salary above defined thresholds (roughly €43.5K for the salarié qualifié, around €53K-plus for the EU Blue Card). The carte itself is multi-year and renewable, covers spouse and dependants under a vie privée et familiale derivative title, and lets the holder work across the EU under Blue Card mobility provisions. Sponsorship is not routine — it is reserved for genuinely scarce skill profiles, typically property finance, sustainability/CSRD, or senior leasing leaders with a track record at a peer European mall operator. For Italian, Spanish, Dutch, German, Polish, and Czech roles, country-equivalent permits (or EU Blue Card mobility) apply.
Why do candidates turn down Klépierre offers?
Three honest reasons recur. First, competing offers from Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield (the larger Paris-listed peer with global Westfield brand presence in the US, UK, and Australia), Carmila (the Carrefour-anchored European mall REIT), Hammerson (London-listed UK and France/Ireland operator), Mercialys (Casino-anchored French operator), Eurocommercial (Italian/French/Swedish), and the major investment-management platforms (CBRE Investment Management, AEW, LaSalle, Patrizia retail funds). Second, comp gaps versus pure-play property finance roles at investment banks (BNP Paribas Real Estate Capital Markets, Eastdil, Lazard Real Estate, Morgan Stanley European Real Estate) and versus operating-platform roles in faster-growing asset classes such as logistics (Prologis, Segro, GLP), data centres (Equinix, Digital Realty, EdgeConneX), and residential build-to-rent. Third, the structural retail-cycle and tenant-concentration narrative — exposure to Inditex, H&M, and a handful of global specialty banners makes some candidates pause. Counter-arguments candidates weigh in favour of Klépierre: best-in-class CSR / GRESB positioning, dominant-asset portfolio with genuine pricing power post-COVID, multi-country European career arc, and the clarity of the SIIC dividend story for compensation tied to LTI.
What is the difference between Paris HQ and the site-based mall manager (directeur de centre) career track?
Paris HQ runs strategy, capital allocation, group asset management, leasing standards, finance, IR, sustainability, legal, IT/data, and group HR — typically seated at 26 boulevard des Capucines, mostly French-first, structured around the Executive Committee and group function leadership. The career arc is corporate-finance-flavoured with strong exposure to capital markets, board reporting, and EPRA reporting. Site-based directeurs de centre and operations teams run the day-to-day economics of a single asset (or cluster) — footfall delivery, tenant-relationship management, marketing campaigns, security, technical operations, sustainability execution, and customer experience — typically located at the centre itself across France, Italy, Iberia, Scandinavia, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, or Czechia. The career arc is operations-and-leadership-flavoured with strong responsibility for the P&L of a physical asset. Movement between the two tracks happens both ways: HQ asset managers often rotate into a directeur de centre role to gain operational depth before returning to a senior HQ position, and successful directeurs are tapped for HQ leadership.
How exposed is Klépierre to Inditex, H&M, and tenant concentration?
Real and material. Inditex banners (Zara as the anchor, plus Bershka, Pull&Bear, Stradivarius, Massimo Dutti) and H&M Group are the two largest tenants on the rent roll across most major Klépierre centres, alongside Apple, Sephora, and the LVMH/Kering accessory portfolios. Klépierre publishes top-10 tenant concentration in its EPRA disclosures and the figure has typically run in the high single digits for the largest single tenant — manageable but real. The mitigants are portfolio diversification (more than 70 centres across 12 countries, no single asset dominates group NRI), the dominance of those tenants in their categories (which makes them highly creditworthy lessees rather than risk concentrations), and the active asset-management programme that progressively introduces new F&B, experiential, and digital-native brands as legacy specialty footprints come up for renewal. Candidates joining leasing, asset management, and finance roles should be ready to discuss the trade-off honestly in interviews.
What is Act4Good® and why does it matter for candidates?
Act4Good® is Klépierre's CSR strategy launched in February 2023, evolving the earlier 'Act for Good' programme. It is built on four pillars: Act for the climate (net-zero by 2030, validated SBTi-aligned trajectory, 80% emissions reduction and 40% energy-consumption reduction already delivered over the prior decade); Act to service communities and territories around the centres; Act as a skills developer for employees, partners, and visitors; and Act to promote sustainable lifestyles across the ecosystem. The programme underpins Klépierre's GRESB number-one ranking in the European listed retail real estate category for several consecutive years, the CDP 'A' climate rating, and inclusion in the CAC 40 ESG index. For candidates this matters in three ways: sustainability fluency (BREEAM, EU Taxonomy, CSRD, SBTi, CRREM) is increasingly expected across functions, not just in the dedicated CSR team; a portion of executive and management bonus is tied to Act4Good® scorecard metrics; and authentic engagement on sustainability is read as a culture-fit signal in interviews.
What are the main Klépierre platforms and country offices?
Group HQ: 26 boulevard des Capucines, Paris (Opéra district). France platform: Paris HQ plus regional asset-management teams covering Val d'Europe (Serris), Créteil Soleil, Saint-Lazare Paris, Toulouse Blagnac, and other dominant French malls. Italy platform: Milan and Rome-area offices managing Porta di Roma, Le Gru (Turin), Campania (Naples), Roma Est, and other Italian centres. Iberia platform: Madrid (covering La Gavia, Plenilunio, Maremagnum Barcelona, and Portuguese assets such as Aqua Portimão). Scandinavia: Steen & Strøm headquartered in Oslo with country offices in Stockholm and Copenhagen, managing Field's (Copenhagen), Emporia (Malmö), Oslo City, and other top Nordic centres. Netherlands: Hoog Catharijne (Utrecht) management plus Amsterdam-area offices. Germany: management of Boulevard Berlin and other German assets. Central Europe: Warsaw (Polish portfolio) and Prague (Czech portfolio). The Turkish portfolio has been progressively reduced through asset sales; check current disclosures for the latest footprint.
How does French legal protection — works councils, 35-hour week, paid leave — apply at Klépierre?
French employees fall under the convention collective nationale de l'immobilier and the standard French Code du travail framework: the legal working week is 35 hours (with annualised reckoning and forfait-jours arrangements common for cadres / managers), the statutory paid leave is five weeks plus typically 8-12 RTT days for forfait-jours cadres, public holidays add roughly 11 days, and the comité social et économique (CSE — successor to comité d'entreprise) is consulted on hiring volumes, organisational change, and economic information. Site-based directeurs de centre and operations teams in France are also covered, with retail-specific scheduling considerations (Sunday opening, late-night opening) handled under the same framework. Italian, Spanish, Dutch, German, Scandinavian, Polish, and Czech employees are covered by their respective national labour codes and (where applicable) sectoral collective agreements and works-council frameworks. For candidates from the US or other less-protected jurisdictions, the practical impact across Klépierre's European footprint is slower but more consultative organisational change and substantially stronger individual job protection once hired.

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