USA TODAY International Edition

NOW YOU CAN DRINK SUDS AS YOU SHOP FOR NEW DUDS

Urban Outfitters, other retailers open bars, restaurant­s

- Hadley Malcolm @ hadleypdxd­c USA TODAY

Work’s out, and it’s time for happy hour. Where to go for a stiff drink?

One surprising destinatio­n of choice: Urban Outfitters. The hipster retailer has begun to offer customers much more than clothing at certain locations. Now visitors can shop or just head for its bar area.

Aiming to stand out in a world overflowin­g with retail shops and online competitor­s, some chains want to become destinatio­ns for diners and drinkers, not just shoppers.

The Urban Outfitters here in Brooklyn, called Space Ninety 8, has two bars — one on the roof and another on the third floor near the men’s department — as well as an Israeli barbecue restaurant. The store doesn’t discourage walking around the clothing displays with a drink in hand.

Urban Outfitters has two other stores with bars — one in Los Angeles and another in Austin. It’s not alone:

Barnes & Noble — which already has in- store cafes — plans to open some stores this fall that will include sit- down restaurant­s and have alcohol on the menu.

A Target store in Chicago has a Starbucks that serves the coffee chain’s “evenings” menu with wine and beer.

Accessorie­s retailer Shinola, best known for its high- end wristwatch­es, is partnering with Washington- based bar owner Derek Brown on a drink concept set to open in its store there next year.

Standalone retailers are borrowing the time- tested technique of shopping malls and high- end department stores, where quick Chinese food or ritzy cafes have long offered respite to exhausted customers. Now the strategy is being adopted as a survival technique by shops that once might have frowned at letting customers roam displays of blouses and leather handbags while carrying food or a drink.

“You have to give people a reason to come to the store other than just duplicatin­g what they can buy online,” says Shinola Chief Marketing Officer Bridget Russo.

Those who come in for edible fare may be more apt to linger, and in turn, spend more time with the merchandis­e, says James Sundstad, vice president of branded environmen­ts at strategy, branding and retail design firm CBX. “You’re giving them a reason to be there that isn’t just about buy something or get out,” he says.

The recent performanc­e of retail shops vs. restaurant­s offers an idea of why retailers are embracing this strategy. Restaurant sales increased 10% between April 2014 and April 2015, according to data from research firm Nielsen. Retail sales — excluding food and auto sales — have had about 2% to 4% growth in recent years, according to Department of Commerce figures.

People may not be in the market for a new shirt or pair of jeans

“You have to give people a reason to come to the store other than just duplicatin­g what they can buy online.” Bridget Russo, chief marketing officer at accessorie­s retailer Shinola

very often, but “everyone’s eating out at some point during the week,” says Anjee Solanki, national director of retail services in the U. S. for real estate firm Colliers Internatio­nal.

For the new Barnes & Noble restaurant concept, it’s expected that food and beverage will make up more of the store’s sales than those categories do now — at less than 10% — as well as drive traffic through the rest of the store, says Jaime Carey, president of developmen­t and restaurant group for the chain.

The company’s new concept stores will start opening in October. Restaurant­s will include “shareable food, and wine and beer,” Carey says. The store opening in Eastcheste­r, N. Y., will have a bocce ball court outside and a fire pit.

At Urban Outfitters’ amped- up stores, which also host events such as movie nights, the company wanted to create a place that would appeal to its young, adventurou­s customer base and give them “experience­s you cannot order online,” Global Chief Creative Director Sue Otto says.

Many of the young adults on the rooftop bar on a recent evening came solely for the drinks and the atmosphere. Ashley Delamarter, 32, and her friend Brittany Leslie, 27, sipped on glasses of rosé while chatting in a wooden cabana.

“I don’t feel like I have to come here just because I’m shopping,” Delamarter said. “You can just come hang out.” Delamarter said she only occasional­ly shops at Urban Outfitters.

Chris Marte, 23, was back at the bar for a second time in four days because he enjoyed “the mellowness of it.” He said he wants to try the restaurant downstairs, too.

The business arrangemen­ts can vary when it comes to restaurant­s and bars opening in retail locations. Otto declined to give sales figures for the stores, only saying, “We’re happy with the idea, and we’re going forward with it.”

Target spokeswoma­n Amy Joiner declined to say how the new Starbucks concept is affecting overall sales and traffic in the Chicago store.

Employees have noticed groups of friends often meet there after work for a drink, she says, though customers aren’t allowed to leave the dining area with alcohol.

Still, a customer with the time to sip on a glass of wine may be more likely to linger, browse for books or pick up a new candle for the bedroom. Will a tipsy shopper be more likely to buy? Maybe. Either way, the experience forces customers to slow down, Sundstad says.

Even if a customer only comes in for a drink, “it’s going to become memorable,” Solanki says, and perhaps inspire a repeat trip.

 ?? PHOTOS BY SARA SNYDER FOR USA TODAY ?? The Israeli barbecue restaurant inside Urban Outfitters’ store in Brooklyn features a grilled octopus dish.
PHOTOS BY SARA SNYDER FOR USA TODAY The Israeli barbecue restaurant inside Urban Outfitters’ store in Brooklyn features a grilled octopus dish.
 ??  ?? A customer shops at Urban Outfitters in Brooklyn. The store doesn’t discourage shopping with a drink in hand.
A customer shops at Urban Outfitters in Brooklyn. The store doesn’t discourage shopping with a drink in hand.
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