Yorkshire Post

City positive over bouncing back – with the focus on smaller units

- CHLOE LAVERSUCH LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

DEMAND FOR empty shops and cafes for small businesses is high in York, despite the pandemic, with city bosses saying the situation is “very positive” for retail and tourism to bounce back.

Larger empty shops may need to be broken down into smaller units, as spaces of 15,000 sq ft or more are not proving to be as popular, suggesting the city could become a hub for small and medium sized companies.

Business leaders are courting companies from elsewhere in the country and trying to get them to move to York or open branches in the city.

Sean Bullick, managing director of Make It York, told a council meeting: “There is some very positive movement on the property front, with high levels of interest in properties, particular­ly retail but also more widely around larger developmen­ts.

“So that is good to see and would suggest we would be in a reasonable position to bounce back.”

He added: “I had a conversati­on with the retail forum and they were talking about the demand levels for small properties in York, which remains very high, so small independen­t small and medium enterprise­s are looking to set up in York.

“Once you get over about 15,000 sq ft, there is less demand for property, so the question then becomes how do you split those properties up? Can you put them to other uses? Can you combine uses? Can you make them flexible?

“We, like all other cities, need to look at what the city centre is for. But I do feel optimistic about that for York.”

York Retail Forum has set up targeted support to showcase properties in the city, mentor anyone who wants to open a business and actively approach companies looking to move to the region.

Chair of the forum Phil Pinder said: “It’s a mix of independen­ts and bigger chains and they all want smaller shops. We need to convert some of our larger shops and split them into smaller spaces.”

Mr Bullick updated the council’s shareholde­r committee on Make It York’s work, which includes planning a calendar of Covid-safe events to boost the city this summer.

Coun Paula Widdowson asked Mr Bullick about the organisati­on’s strategy to attract companies, inward investment and new employers to the city. These could be businesses in specialist industries outside tourism and hospitalit­y.

He said: “We’re working out the plan really of how, for example, at one end of the continuum you get York as a place on the radar of a Chinese investor who may never have heard of York, all the way through to how you get an investing business to sign on the dotted line, hand over the keys to the premises and employ the staff.”

Once you get over 15,000 sq ft, there is less demand for property. Sean Bullick, managing director of Make It York.

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