LANSON-BCC is a notorious champagne Group, present at all levels throughout the chain of production, upholding ancestral techniques, from the vineyard through to sales and marketing.
LANSON-BCC is a group built around eight Maisons producing Champagne wines, created and led by Champagne families. It unites together outstanding Maisons, renowned for their unique wines and benefiting from the effective fit between their customer segments. The combination of ancestral know-how and modern technical capabilities, creative independence and rational synergies enables each one of its Maisons to develop its performances, ensuring the LANSON-BCC Group’s sustainability:
LANSON-BCC is a group built around eight Maisons producing Champagne wines, created and led by Champagne families. It unites together outstanding Maisons, renowned for their unique wines and benefiting from the effective fit between their customer segments. The combination of ancestral know-how and modern technical capabilities, creative independence and rational synergies enables each one of its Maisons to develop its performances, ensuring the LANSON-BCC Group’s sustainability:
- Champagne Lanson (Reims), the prestigious international brand.
- Champagne Chanoine Frères (Reims), wines intended primarily for the European mass retail market (Chanoine brand), notably with the Tsarine Cuvée range.
- Champagne Boizel (Epernay), French mail-order market leader, with wines distributed in the traditional sector for international markets.
- Maison Burtin (Epernay), a European mass retail supplier and owner of the Besserat de Bellefon brand, distributed through traditional networks (restaurants, wine stores).
- Champagne De Venoge (Epernay), sold on selective retail markets, notably with its Louis XV grande cuvée.
- Champagne Philipponnat (Mareuil sur Aÿ), which owns the prestigious Clos des Goisses, with wines exclusively available through selective retail channels, primarily in leading restaurants.
- Champagne Alexandre Bonnet (Les Riceys), owner of a vast vineyard (wine sold in traditional sectors).
1991: founding of the Group with the acquisition of two companies, Chanoine Frères and Champenoise des Grands Vins.
1994: business combination with Champagne Boizel to create the Boizel Chanoine Champagne Group.
1996: floating on the Second Marché through a new equity issue.
1997: acquisition of Champagne Philipponnat, with its famous Le Clos des Goisses vineyards.
1998: acquisition of Champagne de Venoge and Alexandre Bonnet, with its key aux Riceys vineyard.
2006: acquisition of Champagne Lanson and Maison Burtin (ex Marne et Champagne) by Boizel Chanoine Champagne, positioning the Group as one of the Champagne market's leading players.
2010: Boizel Chanoine Champagne becomes LANSON-BCC in order to better reflect its international scale.
2018: acquisition of interests in La Croix d'Ardillères, Damery vineyards.
2019 / 2021 : implementation of a new governance
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