Downtown Retail? Part II: Downtowns Will Be Effected To Different Degrees

The first installment of this retail trends assessment argued that it was very likely that over the next five years retailers would be facing a situation in which consumers would be having significantly fewer discretionary dollars to spend. The first installment also argued that the resulting increased importance of price in consumer decisions would enhance the attractiveness and strength of price-driven value retailers while decreasing the appeal and strength of retailers who offered shoppers opportunities for “trading up.”

However, there will …

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Downtown Retail? Part I: Buckle Your Seat Belts, We’re in for a Bumpy Ride

The DANTH, Inc. 2008 Trends Assessment Every five years – a period known as a lustrum – DANTH Inc. prepares a trends assessment. One of the areas we analyze is downtown retail. Following is a synopsis of the first part of our two-part retail trends study. (For the full report, email [email protected] or visit the trends page on www.ndavidmilder.com.)

What we’ve found is that downtown retailing is entering into a period of stresses – some old, some new – which …

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DOWNTOWN MOVIE THEATERS WILL BE INCREASINGLY IN PERIL

Our Lustrum Trends Assessments.

For the past 20 years, about every five years (a lustrum) DANTH, Inc. has engaged in a review of the social, economic and political trends that are — or soon will be– affecting the health and well-being of downtown, urban neighborhood and Main Street commercial districts. We do this because it is an essential asset when we work on any kind of revitalization strategy for our clients.

Being a curmudgeon, I must also strongly opine that being aware …

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Despite The New National Wave Of Crime, Downtown Security Strategies Still Stand

In a June 24, 2007 posting, “The Downtown Crime Problem Redux?”, I asked if crime was again becoming a crippling problem for our nation’s downtowns because:
“(T)he FBI just announced an increase in violent crimes for the second straight year, an occurrence that signals the first continued spike in homicides, robberies and other serious offenses since the early 1990s. This spike is especially noticeable in medium-sized cities and cities located in the Midwest. In large cities such as New York, …

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An Ethnic Downtown With Many Retail and Fast Food Chains

For many years downtown revitalization experts lamented that large, ethnic downtowns — those with lots of African American and Hispanic shoppers — were being avoided by major retail chains.

That is certainly no longer the case. Here, in New York City, one of the hottest retail locations is along 125th Street in Harlem. Many retail and fast food chains are also occupying important storefronts in the outer borough downtowns such as Jamaica Center in Queens, Downtown Brooklyn and Fordham Road …

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