Allders
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Industry | Retail |
---|---|
Genre | Department store |
Fate | Closure, liquidation and selling off |
Founded | 1862 |
Defunct | 17 January 2013 |
Headquarters | Croydon, Greater London, United Kingdom |
Parent | Jaeger |
Allders was an independent department store operating in the United Kingdom.
Established by Joshua Allder in 1862, Allders developed into a chain of department stores across England and Wales. Its flagship store in Croydon was the third-largest department store in the United Kingdom.[1] The chain was broken up and sold after entering administration in 2005, although the Croydon store continued trading until 2012, having been purchased by Harold Tillman, owner of the Jaeger clothing company. On 17 January 2013, the company closed its flagship store along with the website, meaning the brand ceased to exist.
Contents
Joshua Allder
Allders was opened in 1862 at 102 and 103 North End as a 'linen draper and silk mercer' by Joshua Allder (1838–1904) from Walworth, who had served his apprenticeship in Croydon. His shop was diverse, with special offers on silk dresses and also a morning dress section, and departments offering lower-cost items such as buttons and ribbons. This diversity showed a shrewdness in business and an understanding of his mostly female customers.[2]
Croydon was a growing town, and Allder's business grew with it. In 1870, the shop expanded into 104, 106 and 107 North End[2]– he had to wait for some 20 years to get 105, a bakery. The wealth Allder made allowed him to play a prominent part in the local community, on the local board of health, on the council of the County Borough of Croydon[2] for nine years and in the non-conformist church community. He supported greater rights for his workers, being instrumental in getting local stores closed for a half-day on Wednesdays. Allder died in 1904 leaving a store which had expanded beyond clothing and haberdashery to sell glass and porcelain, among other items.
His main residence in Pampisford Road, South Croydon, houses Regina Coeli RC school, and two cul-de-sacs nearby are named Allder Way and Joshua Close.
Growth
In 1908 Allder's family sold the business to J.W. Holdron and F.C. Bearman, owners of stores in Peckham and Leytonstone respectively. They developed the store into 50 departments with 500 staff and owned the business until 1921. It then passed to the Lawrence family, under whose control it became a limited company.[2] In 1926 the famous North End facade was created, uniting the frontage of the premises for the first time. In 1932 the Arcade from North End to George Street was completed,[2] which proved very popular with its varied concessions, a herald of shopping malls of the future. Allders was considered a pioneering retailer.
The building suffered considerable damage in World War II but never closed. The refurbishment saw improvements, including the takeover of a cinema auditorium as the gift department and Croydon's first escalators in 1954.[2] By 1958, the Lawrence family was forced to sell as a result of death duties incurred after the death of Daniel Arthur Lawrence, managing director. The store was acquired by Jack & Bernard Lyons' United Drapery Stores, owners of Richard Shops, John Collier, Alexandre Tailors and several department stores. The son of D.A. Lawrence, S. John Lawrence, was kept on by UDS as Managing Director. Allders continued to expand, reaching £1 million turnover in 1958 and £3 million by 1963. Fashion's importance declined, with household items taking a greater role.
In the 1960s there was considerable change in Croydon, particularly the construction of the Whitgift Centre to the north of Allders, into which the store expanded, and the creation of the St George's Walk development. Transport and lifestyle changes led to greater competition with the West End and further improvements were required to modernise the store. The section fronting George Street was rebuilt and expanded, retaining a Victorian facade, alongside a new addition. Rebuilding works continued into Dingwall Avenue and by 1976 Allders had 1,700 staff and 500,000 square feet (46,000 m²) of floor space. It was a Croydon landmark and became the third-largest department store in the UK, after Harrods and Selfridges. It had the largest carpet department in Europe, amongst other claims. Croydon was by this time a major retail centre.
Allders' immediate competitor, Kennards, was renamed Debenhams in 1973, along with many other Debenhams stores. To compete with the central buying and advertising of Debenhams and other larger groups, the department stores owned by UDS were all gradually renamed Allders.[2] This process began with Shinners of Sutton in 1979 and later Hinds of Eltham, Medhursts of Bromley, James Page of Camberley, Mackross of Cardiff, Willis Ludlow of Hull and Landport Drapery Bazaar (LDB) in Portsmouth. Only Arding and Hobbs at Clapham Junction in London and the furnishing store of Clover at Kirkstall in Leeds retained their original identities. A new geometric logo of ten orange 'A's arranged in a circle on brown and cream-coloured stationery, bags and carpets appeared across the group, together with the phrase 'All that a great store should be'.
In 1983 the Lyons family sold the UDS Group to Hanson plc and Allders became a flagship company of the group, with Lord Hanson appearing on Allders' roof in TV adverts. Allders expanded with new stores opening in Basildon and Chatham and in many international airports as duty-free concessions. A new 'Fourth Floor' was built on the roof of the Croydon store to house a new Audio and Television Department and two new restaurants as well as a link into the staff areas of London House on Dingwall Avenue. The group's brown, cream and orange livery was replaced with a scheme of light blue and gold lettering on a dark blue background.
In 1989 a management buyout saw the international arm spun off as a separate company. There was continued upheaval in Croydon with the complete refurbishment of the Whitgift Centre and of parts of the store. The vast carpet department was contracted to a secondary location allowing for the creation of a new perfumery and cosmetics hall at the centre of the ground floor. A new Allders store of 137,000 square feet (12,700 m2) opened at Woking in 1992. Allders plc was floated on the stock market in 1993.
The growth of the group rapidly accelerated following stock market flotation with the acquisition of existing stores and the building of new ones. This began with the acquisition of Nottingham Co-Op's lease on their Broad Marsh Centre store and the development of a chain of stand-alone home furnishing stores. The opening of a second Clover store at Rotherham was succeeded by the development of 'At Home with Allders' a concept for new stores in out-of-town retail parks, the first of which opened at Aylesford in Kent in 1994. The Clover stores were both rebranded.
In September 1996 Allders purchased a number of department stores from the Owen Owen group that traded under the Lewis's and Owen Owen names. This included branches in Basingstoke, Coventry, Ilford, Leeds, Oxford, Redditch and Slough.
In 1997 Allders acquired the bankrupt Maples furniture brand and seven of its retail outlets. These stores were integrated into the Allders At Home portfolio and brought the brand to town centre locations in Bromley, Chelmsford, Crawley, Kingston upon Thames, Reading, Sutton Coldfield and Watford. The Bromley outlet, in direct competition with the town's main Allders store, was soon disposed of. The Kingston store, offering a range focussed solely on furniture, beds and carpets, struggled to compete with Bentalls and John Lewis. This competition in the town and the frontage of the store being obscured for some time whilst work on the Kingston Bridge was carried out led to the store's closure within two years. A second Kingston store was later opened in the former C & A building, offering a broader range of merchandise for the home.
Decline
Shares in Allders crashed in 1998 after disappointing sales and difficulties integrating the Maples furniture group. Nevertheless, it continued a policy of expansion, acquiring the premises of the former C & A stores at Guildford, Kingston upon Thames, Leicester and York in 2000 and later the large C & A building on the south side of Oxford Street in London. The 'At Home with Allders' trading name was replaced with 'Allders At Home' on conversion of a number of the C&A stores to an expanded home format. Problems continued, however. In Croydon, there were plans to build a new shopping centre, Park Place, on the store's site and much of the area to the south. A new Allders would be built opposite the Town Hall. Croydon Council's partner in this plan was developer Minerva plc. In late 2002 Minerva was part of a new group called Scarlett Retail, named after Terry Green's daughter, that bid for Allders, with Lehman Brothers investment bank and a management team including Terry Green, the former chief executive of Debenhams and BHS.
Some felt at the time that Scarlett's bid was based on Minerva's intention to acquire Allders' site for its Park Place project, in order to sell the plot to another retailer, probably John Lewis. The bid was felt by many to be overpriced. Nevertheless, Scarlett paid Tom Hunter an improved price and they landed the company in early 2003 for about £162m ($316m). Green became chief executive and set about an overhaul of Allders' image. It was claimed that some of the traditional homeware, haberdashery and clothing for middle-aged, middle-income women was reduced, with a new emphasis on young fashion and beauty products, though this was denied by Terry Green.[3]
Administration
In September 2004, Minerva announced that Allders had made a loss of £22.6m for the year to 30 June 2004,[4] blaming the speed of the transformation of the business. In December 2004, it announced the business was up for sale. There was some early interest that Primark was to purchase some of the stores[5] but no interest was found in taking on the company as a whole and it was placed in administration on 26 January 2005. It was revealed that there was a pensions deficit of £15 million. 130 of the staff at the Croydon headquarters were laid off, including Green and other senior managers. An under-construction store at the Drake Circus Shopping Centre in Plymouth was never opened and was split into stores for Next and Primark when the centre opened in October 2005.
Kroll, the administrators, searched for buyers for the chain or individual stores. Of Allders' 50 stores, only 35 received offers, with rival retailers such as House of Fraser, BHS, Debenhams and Primark said to have expressed an interest. The ten remaining stores, including the Oxford Street branch, began closing-down sales on 5 February and had started to close from March 2005: all had closed by May 2005 with the Leeds store being the last to close down on 22 May 2005 (with exception of Croydon).[6]
Renewal
In May 2005 it was announced that the owners of Jaeger would take on the flagship Croydon store and that it would continue to trade as Allders. In the first year of operation the new Managing Director, Andrew MacKenzie, turned the fortunes of the company around and projected a £1 million gross profit. Significant investment was made to attract back to the store its Croydon audience. It was the only Allders store to survive the 2005 administration.
Development threat
In April 2006 it was announced that Allders had secured an extension to their lease through to 2008[7] safeguarding the jobs of almost 1,000 employees.
The land and store that Allders lease has regular break clauses to the benefit of the 'virtual freehold leaseholder' held by Minerva subsidiary companies for 250 years. The freehold interest is held by the Croydon Whitgift Foundation, following a deal in the lead up to the compulsory purchase order with Minerva to ensure their long term financial interests (they were founded in the late 16th century).
The council has an unamended development agreement with Minerva for a two-phase development, the first phase south of George Street, the second phase north of George street. At the time that the Allders chain went into administration Minerva announced that the development was to be in a single phase that includes demolition of the Allders store and a five-year wait until the new development is completed. This would be untenable for Allders. The development agreement between Croydon Council and Minerva is based on a two-phase development enabling Allders to stay on site until their new store was completed and fitted out. The Conservative administration elected in May 2006 of Croydon Council is intent on securing John Lewis as the anchor tenant, but this does not fit in with the development as granted because John Lewis does not require a department store of the size that has to be built by Minerva.
Two options existed for Minerva:
- to put a new planning application in for a smaller development with a store suitable for John Lewis
- to negotiate with Allders to anchor the new development, as originally envisaged
It is thought that Minerva is particularly worried about scenario (1) since its share price is based on the large development already granted with planning permission – any new application would also take at least a year to work through the system and so delay the development significantly. Croydon Council has stated publicly that it is not in discussions with Minerva on a new planning application. It has also stated that the development agreement has not been amended in any way.
Minerva has a development agreement of its own with Lend Lease to develop the project, subject to securing an anchor department store.
The overall viability of the Minerva plans (1.08 million sq.ft shopping centre) has been thrown into doubt following the construction of the 1.615 million sq.ft Westfield London shopping centre development at White City and the existing 1,300,000 sq ft (120,000 m2) shopping development at Bluewater to the east of London.
In December 2011, Allders director Max Menon was named as new chairman of Croydon Business Improvement District.[8]
2013 Closure
Allders of Croydon was placed into administration on 15 June 2012. It was blamed on the "tough market conditions of the retail sector" at the time.[9] The administrators Duff & Phelps failed in their search for a new investor and Allders finally closed down after the last day of trading on 22 September 2012.[10] It was reported in Scotland on Sunday that Metis, a Glasgow-based intellectual property firm were looking to sell brands that were owned by Allders. Along with the Allders name, administrators from Duff & Phelps are seeking to sell furniture brands Maples and Waring & Gillow. Eventually, Allders ceased trading on 17 January 2013.
Former locations
- Aylesford (now BHS)
- Basildon (now Debenhams)
- Basingstoke (now Primark)
- Bolton (closed)
- Bromley, 162 High Street (now Primark)
- Bromley, 44 High Street
- Broughton, Flintshire (now BHS)
- Camberley (closed)
- Cardiff (closed) (now Queens Arcade)
- Chatham (now Debenhams)
- Chelmsford (closed)
- Chichester (now BHS)
- Chineham (closed)
- Clapham Junction (now Debenhams)
- Coventry (now Primark)
- Crawley
- Croydon (former flagship store; remained open until September 2012. Now replaced by Croydon Village Outlet)
- Eltham (closed)
- Guildford (now Primark)
- Handforth (now BHS)
- Horsham (closed, premises occupied by Beales since 2006)
- Hull (now Primark)
- Ilford (now Debenhams)
- Ipswich (closed)
- Kingston upon Thames, 2 Clarence Street (closed)
- Kingston upon Thames, 76 Eden Street (now Primark)
- Kirkstall (now BHS)
- Knaresborough (now BHS)
- Lakeside (now Primark)
- Leeds (building redeveloped into a multi-purpose structure including offices, a Sainsbury's, Argos TK Maxx and Clas Ohlson)
- Leicester (now Primark)
- Lincoln (now BHS)
- London, Oxford Street (closed, subsequently acquired by Primark)
- Northampton (now BHS)
- Nottingham (closed)
- Oxford (now Primark)
- Portsmouth (now Debenhams)
- Reading (closed)
- Redditch(now Primark)
- Romford (now The Range)
- Rotherham
- Sheffield, Meadowhall (closed)
- Slough (now Debenhams)
- Southampton
- Sutton (now Debenhams)
- Sutton Coldfield (now Aldi)
- Watford
- Woking (now Debenhams)
- York, Clifton Moor (closed)
- York, Coppergate (now BHS)
See also
Bibliography
- Memories of Croydon (1999), various authors, ISBN 1-900463-19-9
References
- ↑ Allders collapses into administration Retail Week, 15 June 2012 (subscription required)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ Allders store chain up for sale BBC News, 8 December 2004
- ↑ Allders news My Fashion United
- ↑ Allders store closing its doors BBC News, 22 May 2005
- ↑ Allders safe for two years Croydon Guardian, 26 April 2006
- ↑ Croydon BID appoints new chairman Croydon Business Improvement District, 1 December 2011
- ↑ Allders of Croydon department store goes into administration Evening Standard, 15 June 2012
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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