Perthshire Advertiser

City is set to lose high-profile stores

Remember’ Lakeland quits and Paperchase facing struggle

- MELANIE BONN

Perth is facing a double retail blow with one store pulling out of the central shopping zone and another potentiall­y following.

Household and kitchenwar­e supplier Lakeland has announced it will leave its large Perth site in St John Street.

Lakeland will slash four branches. Ipswich closes this month, Cardiff and Epson Surrey are next and then the doors of the Perth outlet will close in May.

Lakeland was founded in 1964 in Windermere, Cumbria, and has almost 70 shops across the UK.

Confirming the closures “with regret”, the company said it was “very proud of our store teams” and would be supporting them.

“The experience our customers receive in our retail stores remains integral to our ethos to deliver exceptiona­l customer service and wherever there are opportunit­ies to trade profitably, we will seek to agree, renew and extend leases with landlords,” Lakeland said in a statement. The Perth store sits side by side with the now empty Beales department store. The departure will leave that side of the pedestrian­ised street with little activity to draw customers to the independen­t shops that share the location.

Meanwhile, the Fair City could also lose Paperchase, the stationery brand which has a branch on the High Street, after the company announced it is “on the brink” of administra­tion.

The firm has filed a notice to appoint administra­tors, a move that will give it breathing space from its creditors while it works out a rescue plan.

There is a Paperchase outlet midway along Perth High Street. The company has 127 stores and about 1500 employees.

A second lockdown in November in some UK cities wiped away a crucial period for the firm, which makes just under half its sales from

Christmas card and gift purchases.

A spokespers­on said: “The cumulative effects of lockdown one, lockdown two - at the start of the Christmas shopping period - and now the current restrictio­ns have put unbearable strain on retail businesses across the country.”

The company went through an insolvency process, known as a company voluntary arrangemen­t or CVA, almost two years ago to cut costs.

The chain now has just days to find a solution.

“Out of lockdown we’ve traded well, but as the country faces further restrictio­ns for some months to come, we have to find a sustainabl­e future for Paperchase,” the spokespers­on added.

A string of high-profile retailers dotted around Perth has hit trouble in the past year, including Debenhams, Topshop and Edinburgh Woollen Mills.

 ??  ?? On song
On song
 ??  ?? Walk on by The stationery store Paperchase has not had strong sales and is scrambling for a solution to stay afloat
Walk on by The stationery store Paperchase has not had strong sales and is scrambling for a solution to stay afloat
 ??  ?? Tough times Lakeland has decided to close four stores including Perth’s extensive branch
Tough times Lakeland has decided to close four stores including Perth’s extensive branch

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