Scottish Daily Mail

End of WFH misery for city centres

Now businesses roar back to life

- By Archie Mitchell

CITy centres are roaring back to life as workers return to their desks, according to two leading companies.

Upper Crust-owner SSP and west End landlord Shaftesbur­y said the ending of workfrom-home guidance is boosting business and helping the economy to recover.

In particular, the return of office workers has been a much needed boost for pubs, restaurant­s and shops devastated by the spread of omicron.

The Government’s Plan B measures and work-fromhome guidance turned city centres into ghost towns.

on what should have been one of the busiest days in the run up to Christmas, footfall in city centres was a third below pre-pandemic levels.

But Shaftesbur­y and SSP said footfall and commuter numbers are surging back following the guidance lifting. Shaftesbur­y, which owns 600 restaurant­s, cafes, pubs and shops in London’s west End, said it is ready for an ‘extended period of uninterrup­ted growth’. It said vacancy rates are falling back towards prepandemi­c levels, in a further sign the worst of the pandemic has passed.

The business said the return of internatio­nal travel would also support city centres bouncing back from Covid.

SSP, whose brands include Camden Food Co and Ritazza, said the emergence of omicron and extra restrictio­ns was a blow to its recovery.

The company is seen as a barometer for commuter traffic and internatio­nal travel because of its stores in airports and train stations. It was hammered by the pandemic as railway stations and airports were emptied and it was forced to cut around 4,000 jobs. At one point, just ten of its 580 UK sites were open, eight of them in hospitals.

Before the omicron variant emerged, it was trading at 66pc of pre-pandemic levels as the number of passengers on trains picked up, driven by the ending of lockdown and staff returning to offices. This dropped to 57pc in december and January because of Plan B measures and the work-fromhome guidance. But sales have since picked up, especially in the UK and in European countries where restrictio­ns have been dropped.

It said yesterday that sales are heading back to pre-pandemic levels driven by strong demand at train stations as workers get back to their desks. Around 1,950 of its 2,700 outlets are open and it said barring any further restrictio­ns it is well placed for a strong summer.

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