The Mercury News Weekend

Once a retail shrine, flagship stores lose their alluring shine

Retailers vanish from high-profile shopping districts

- By Anne d’Innocenzio Associated Press

NEW YORK — It used to be considered the retailer’s crown jewel — a large format store on a swank corridor that showed off the best of what a brand had to offer.

But now the so- called flagship store is disappeari­ng from high-profile shopping thoroughfa­res like Manhattan’s Madison Avenue and Chicago’s Magnificen­t Mile because of skyrocketi­ng rents and the shift to online shopping.

Over the last year or so, Gap, Tommy Hilfiger, Lord & Taylor and Polo Ralph Lauren have closed their flagship stores on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue. Abercrombi­e announced in May that it was closing three more of its big locations — an Abercrombi­e store in Milan, an Abercrombi­e store in Fukuoka, Japan and a Hollister-branded store in Manhattan’s SoHo area. The announceme­nt came after the teen retailer shut down flagships in Hong Kong and Copenhagen.

Other retailers are reimaginin­g the flagship concept instead of abandoning it altogether. Nike, for instance, opened a massive store on Fifth Avenue late last year that doesn’t have any cash registers. It lets shoppers see details of items displayed on a mannequin by scanning the QR code and then having those items delivered to a fitting room or a designated pickup spot. Levi Strauss & Co.’s new flagship in Manhattan’s Time Square features larger dressing rooms with call buttons and tailors who can add trims and patches to customers’ jeans.

Those still clinging to the old concept, however, are having a harder time. The latest victim could be Barneys New York, which opened its 10-story Madison Avenue store in 1993 and became a cultural icon in luxury shopping but now risks closure. High rents and a dramatic shift toward online shopping are pressur

ing it to evaluate restructur­ing options, including possible bankruptcy, according to a source close to the matter who asked to remain anonymous because the discussion­s are confidenti­al.

Joseph Aquino, who runs his namesake real estate services firm, says the days of the shop-til-you drop mentality on Madison Avenue popularize­d by the HBO popular series of the 1990s “Sex in the City” are over.

“She was 45 and now she is 65... She isn’t shopping like she was 45,” Aquino said. “We are in the phase where a lot of younger shoppers don’t want to go the high street. They sit around and buy online and that’s what we are fighting against.”

The concept of a flagship store is more than a century old and used to be limited to retailers’ biggest store — one in their first or most prominent location. But in the last 20 years, a flagship store frenzy took hold and retailers from Gap to H&M looked at them as a musthave shrine to their brands, opening multiple flagships in multiple locations. Not only that but they were willing to pay exorbitant sums of money to showcase their merchandis­e in luxury corridors.

Rents have swelled so much, however, that many retailers can no longer justify the high price, especially as more shoppers shift their spending online and physical stores lose foot traffic.

CoStar Group, a real estate research firm, examined retail leasing at luxury corridors in seven cities: Miami’s Lincoln Road, Beverly Hills’ Golden Triangle, Chicago’s Magnificen­t Mile, Washington D.C.’s Georgetown district, Boston’s Newbury Street, Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue and San Francisco’s Union Square. It found the vacancy rate shot up to 7% last year from 3% in 2017 — greater than the 4% those areas saw in the Great Recession.

Last year, the net number of retail square footage lost in these corridors topped 353,000, surpassing the 214,000 loss of square feet seen in 2009. The loss was exaggerate­d by Macy’s closing of its big store in San Francisco’s Union Square, but CoStar found that excluding that store, every high- end shopping corridor it tracked saw a weakening trend.

As a result, rents on Madison Avenue and Fifth Avenue have taken a hit as demand for these locations have fallen. Average annual asking rents for ground floor locations for the Fifth Avenue strip between 49th and 60th Street was $2,779 per square feet in the first quarter of 2019, down 11% from its peak of the first quarter of 2017, says commercial real estate broker Cushman & Wakefield.

But many analysts believe they haven’t fallen far enough. In fact, commercial rents in 45 out of the 60 cities including New York, Los Angeles and Miami, are higher than in 2009 when the economy was in a recession, according to data from CBRE, a commercial real estate service firm. In the case of Barneys New York’s Madison Avenue store, the landlord there reportedly raised its rent to $30 million from $16 million earlier this year. A Barneys spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

Still, flagship stores aren’t dead. Many retailers like Nike and Levi are embracing new versions that beckon shoppers with less merchandis­e and more high-tech experience­s.

 ?? RICHARD DREW — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? During the past year or so, Levi Strauss & Co., Gap, Tommy Hilfiger, Lord & Taylor and Polo Ralph Lauren have closed their flagship stores on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue.
RICHARD DREW — ASSOCIATED PRESS During the past year or so, Levi Strauss & Co., Gap, Tommy Hilfiger, Lord & Taylor and Polo Ralph Lauren have closed their flagship stores on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue.
 ?? KATHY WILLENS — ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? A woman pauses to read a farewell sign outside Lord & Taylor’s Fifth Avenue store which has closed for good.
KATHY WILLENS — ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES A woman pauses to read a farewell sign outside Lord & Taylor’s Fifth Avenue store which has closed for good.

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