Austrian Independents
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A1-Tankstellenbetrieb GmbH has been around only since the early 1990s and at the time that this map was printed for them (1997) still only had 6 outlets. The map itself is a standard design from Ed. Hölzel of Vienna (Wien) on one side at 1:800,000, with town plans of the provincial capitals on the reverse. A1 has the distinction of being the one of the smallest chains to have a specially printed road map in Europe. |
Avanti was probably Europe's most aggressive smaller independent. Opening its first filling station in 1972, it expanded into newly liberalised markets including Spain, Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria and Romania, with almost 200 sites outside Austria, as well as a small chain in Southern Germany. However it only had around 150 service stations in its home market, after taking over supply to 70 former Shell sites in late 1997 and this rapid growth did not lead to financial security. During 2001 there were suggestions that it would have to be rescued by the Russian company Lukoil, even though it was still expanding, for example by buying the small Acord chain in Slovakia in late 2001. Eventually its financial crisis caught up with the company, and in the end it was largely acquired by OMV in April 2003.
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The map shown left is dated 10/98 and marks Avanti locations with a yellow dot as well as giving their addresses. Drawn by Freytag-Berndt u. Artaria, it is also at 1:800,000 with the same city plans on the reverse as the A1 map. |
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Genol is jointly owned by RWA-Raiffeisen Ware Austria AG and OMV, the Austrian national oil company. RWA brings together 55 agricultural co-operatives in Styria, Upper & Lower Austria and has links with BayWa, its Bavarian equivalent that is also involved in petrol retailing. |
No maps are known from other Austrian independents such as OIL!, Stroh, Türmol or Disk, but it's not impossible that some may have been produced over the past two decades.
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Text and layout © Ian Byrne, 1999-2006 |
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