Ikea has stopped plans by thousands of people to play hide-and-seek in its box-like stores in the Netherlands.
After a spirited round of the children’s game attracted hundreds of people to a Belgian Ikea outlet last summer, the world’s biggest furniture retailer has forbidden similar events in several of its Dutch stores, citing safety reasons.
The organisers of the games, who got word out over Facebook, are now looking for alternative locations. "It's hard to control," Ikea Group spokeswoman Martina Smedberg said by phone. "We need to make sure people are safe in our stores and that's hard to do if we don't even know where they are."
More than 32,000 people have signed up via Facebook to play hide-and-seek at Ikea’s Eindhoven store, while 19,000 people registered interest in a game in Amsterdam and 12,000 people for one in Utrecht. The vendor of Billy bookshelves has 13 stores in the Netherlands.
Ikea granted permission for one game of hide-and-seek in its store in Wilrijk, Belgium in July after 29-year-old Elise De Rijck put it on her list of 30 things to do before her 30th birthday.
“Sometimes it’s fun just to do some childish things,” De Rijck, an event organizer based in Antwerp, said by phone. “Ikea is like an extremely large living room.”
About 500 people joined in the game, according to Annelies Nauwelaerts, a spokeswoman for Ikea Belgium. People were hiding in fridges, under stuffed toys, under Ikea’s blue shopping bags and even in the storage space under beds, said De Rijck, a regular Ikea shopper.
“We played hide and seek the whole day,” said De Rijck, whose bucket-list also includes throwing a pie in someone’s face and participating in a mud fight. “It was really exhausting but so much fun.”
Bloomberg