San Francisco Chronicle

Hardhit Gap will permanentl­y close downtown flagship, most S.F. stores.

- By Shwanika Narayan

Gap Inc. will permanentl­y close its flagship store near Union Square, as the coronaviru­s pandemic and prolonged retail woes strike into the heart of the company’s San Francisco hometown.

The company has also closed two other Gap stores in the city — in Embarcader­o Center near its waterfront corporate headquarte­rs and Stonestown Galleria — for good.

That leaves the Chestnut Street location as the only Gap store operationa­l in San Francisco. The company’s Old Navy flagship on Market Street, multiple Banana Republic and Athleta locations as well as Intermix on Fillmore, remain open.

“While these stores were initially closed as a result of city mandates, these permanent closures are part of the larger strategy we announced last year to resize our fleet based on customer shopping patterns and store profit

ability,” Gap said in an email to The Chronicle. “As with any store closure, we are encouragin­g employees to find opportunit­ies at other locations within our family of brands.”

In April, Gap said that it stopped paying rent for North American stores that were closed because of coronaviru­s orders, and that it was actively renegotiat­ing lease terms. Weeks later, the predominan­tly mallbased retailer was sued by two of its biggest landlords, Simon Property Group and Brookfield Properties, for failing to pay millions in rent.

In July, Gap Inc., including its subsidiari­es Old Navy, Banana Republic, Athleta, and Janie and Jack, countersue­d the mall landlords and said that even as government restrictio­ns ease, the pandemic remains widespread and harmful, and has resulted in “severe and irreparabl­e hardships” for the company that were not foreseeabl­e when the leases were signed.

The retail industry had plenty of troubles prepandemi­c, with fewer people visiting malls and an abundance of online competitio­n, but since March, the sector has faced a worsening crisis as mall stores closed and reopened and closed again, and customers pulled back on spending amid rising unemployme­nt.

Retail bankruptci­es have mounted, with Stein Mart, a 112yearold discount retailer, and Lord & Taylor, considered to be the oldest department store in the country, filing for bankruptcy protection this month.

The demise of the threestory Gap flagship — located in the historic Flood Building, which dates to 1904 — adds to the list of permanent closures in and around Union Square, including Warby Parker, Brooks Brothers, Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Vilebriqui­n and Agent Provocateu­r, among others.

 ??  ??
 ?? Connor Radnovich / The Chronicle 2015 ?? Pummeled by the pandemic and broader retail challenges, Gap is permanentl­y closing its flagship store on Market Street, as well as two other stores in its hometown of San Francisco.
Connor Radnovich / The Chronicle 2015 Pummeled by the pandemic and broader retail challenges, Gap is permanentl­y closing its flagship store on Market Street, as well as two other stores in its hometown of San Francisco.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States