Jump to content

Recommended Posts

For those worried about the invasion of the faceless chains it is worth remembering that the reason we have so few in LL is that the footprints of most premises are too small for chains to bother. This keeps independants here, but of course the size of establishments does restrict their opportunities and range. As rents are reviewed (and will go up) older establishments will find that their revenues per square foot (or area unit of your choice) will move out of equilibrium with their rentals. This means either moving into higher value sales (not easy for a florist) or increasing throughput dramatically (ditto). The penalties for living in a vibrant and 'improving' area are that certain types of retail outlet are priced out. Not helped when they are competed with by companies (i.e M&S) with a wider range of items for sale, some of which are of much higher unit value per sales space occupied.


In some other areas landlords have discovered that moving from retail (or commercial) into domestic usage is far more lucrative - hence the loss of shops in many of the small areas around us (Underhill, Wood Vale etc.).

kate7 Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> From internet appears that indeed Bonnie's is officially permanently closed.

> Attachments: bonnies florist.docx (37.3KB)


For those who couldn't read it in their browser, it contained just the attached.

What was the source webpage?

I'm not surprised shopless Sally's makes money with no shop overheads - I was astonished to see they were charging 20p for a slice of dried orange at Christmas and sell flowers by the stem at inflated prices. I shall really miss Bonnies - her bargain bucket ensured I've always had flowers, no matter how short of money I've been.

claresy Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I'm not surprised shopless Sally's makes money

> with no shop overheads - I was astonished to see

> they were charging 20p for a slice of dried orange

> at Christmas and sell flowers by the stem at inflated prices.

> I shall really miss Bonnies - her bargain bucket ensured

>I've always had flowers, no matter how short of money I've been.



To be fair oranges are not cheap, and you can't easily use the very juicy small ones which are cheaper, because those takes ages to dry because of all the juice.


And it takes heat to dry them, which has to be paid for.


I make my own dried orange slices at Christmas, to hang on the tree, but I'd have been quite happy to pay 20p for a ready-dried slice, because slicing and drying them (on a rack over a radiator in my case) is a faff.


Bonnie's bargain bucket was of flowers which were well past their best and wouldn't last much longer, hence being sold off very cheaply. I do agree maybe better than no flowers at all, but I'm not sure they were a huge bargain.

  • 2 months later...
  • 2 weeks later...

Hi Newave,

Just to let you know, Platform1 restaurant is permanently closed. I have been there couple of time.

Such a shame that Lordship lane or the neighborhood is going to be for big companies and soon

we will be surround only by Costa, Nando's and co....

coqueliklo Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Hi Newave,

> Just to let you know, Platform1 restaurant is

> permanently closed. I have been there couple of

> time.

> Such a shame that Lordship lane or the

> neighborhood is going to be for big companies and

> soon

> we will be surround only by Costa, Nando's and

> co....


agree.. it'll just be like every dull identikit highstreet due to greedy landlords.

sad times

I think these landlords will get a wake up call very soon.


There are a number of shops that have been unlet for some significant time (Jaflong, the cook shop etc) that closed due to rent increases and meanwhile the big chains like Jamie Oliver, Byron etc are negotiating huge rent decreases following CVAs and their landlords are bending over just to keep a tenant in.

only by Costa, Nando's -


The problem with this statement is that it takes responsibility for such monoculture away from the consumer. ?2.+ coffee and factory-farmed/sometimes-ritually-slaughtered chicken are what people want, it seems, including those who bemoan the state of the high street (and animal welfare). If people didn't want (or, more likely, if they were willing to face up to the realities of) such purchases the high street would be different.

Commercial properties are a whole different rental regime to household stuff & its has always been common for landlords to sit on vacant properties for long periods - this is not something that side of the industry is unused to. Small business may not be able to commit to the length of arrangement required , there are outfitting costs to be considered on short leases and possibly legacy or dark rent from the previous tenants may be in operation.

Just wanted to add something to this thread that I'm a start up fashion retailer looking for pop-up space to get me started. An issue I have with the empty spaces is that they would be ideal for to do a pop-up until the landlord finds a tenant, they get to make some money in the meantime and its better for the high street than an empty shop... we all win but the gatekeeper estate agents are rarely willing to encourage the landlords to do this or just say no out right and the landlords seem to be some faceless, anonymous people who are out of reach and don't care about the local high streets or helping new businesses.


I don't know how to get a space at the moment, have amazing stock arriving and nowhere to put it...but I'm sure there'll be more cafes opening.

coqueliklo Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Hi Newave,

> Just to let you know, Platform1 restaurant is

> permanently closed. I have been there couple of

> time.

> Such a shame that Lordship lane or the

> neighborhood is going to be for big companies and

> soon

> we will be surround only by Costa, Nando's and

> co....



That's a shame. I must admit, I only went there the once, but it was good.

Is there a big move to 'chainification' on LL? There are a handful of chains, but that's been the case for a while now. I haven't noticed a huge increase in the number of 'big names'. There has always been a turnover in indies too as far as I can recall. Am I mistaken?

rahrahrah Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Is there a big move to 'chainification' on LL?

> There are a handful of chains, but that's been the

> case for a while now. I haven't noticed a huge

> increase in the number of 'big names'. There has

> always been a turnover in indies too as far as I

> can recall. Am I mistaken?


You're not wrong, just every time this discussion happens you get people bemoaning the imminent influx of Costa, Nando's etc, but actually very little has happened. There has always been turnover on the high street, shops and restaurants have tried and failed or just decided to go elsewhere. It's a shame there seems to be such pressure on rents but when you look at the empty units I hope the landlords losing money through lack of tenants end up reducing their rent as a result. I guess that's how the market works.


n.b. Platform One is kind of a shame but I'm not surprised. The food was generally pretty good but they were hard work. When they were busy everything took ages - they needed another member of staff. The nature of the place meant you could have a great meal but if you went back you either had pretty much exactly the same thing, or a completely different chef so it was hit and miss.

Is there a big move to 'chainification' on LL?


I have commented before that what has 'saved' us from chains has been the small footprint of most LL retail premises. Most are smaller than what chain outlets will be looking for (other than e.g. Timpson's where the footprint is too large)

Walked past today, and saw what looked like cheap mass produced shabby chic tat. retro style signs reading 'man-cave'

and some truly nasty faux gilt antiquey mirrors.

I'd much rather have the young designer in a pop up than made in china overpriced retro crap!

  • 3 months later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Very sad to see H&B on LL. Will still go to Health Matters! 
    • H&B Is coming to Lordship Lane  It will be next to the Large St Christophers in Lordship Lane Also just to confirm that Oliver Bonas is taking over the 2 white stuff shops (i spoke to the builders yesterday and they confirmed they are breaking through to combine all three shops)
    • So here we go again, but with a proposal for a bigger and longer event. This despite the massive failings (again) last year with serious & long lasting damage to our park throughout the summer, lack of effective waste management, widespread public nuisance by the attendees, and of course the noise. Every year GALA are set conditions for their event licence, every year they fail to meet them, then every year they are granted a licence again - depressing. First impressions from the site plan - the proposed footprint has increased dramatically, sprawling further down & across our park (image attached with 2024 footprint in orange & 2025 extension in red). There  will be a music stage within 50m of our front room. The entrance area will be on a sports pitch. The trackway for heavy plant access will be across two sports fields. The entrance / exit for heavy plant will be opposite a school. The road at that point is regularly gridlocked due to parked & waiting cars. Increased trackway = increased damage to grass. I'm sure there's plenty more that is unacceptable... It's clear that we all need to comment on this consultation, but it's not clear how to actually add comments / participate. The email & consultation document both direct you to the GALA page on the council website - www.southwark.gov.uk/Gala2025 - but this only has details of the GALA PR sessions, not the official consultation. I've raised this with the council, I'll post if I get a response. I've also raised the issue that the council's Outdoor Event Policy states that "Applications for major events must be submitted a minimum of nine months prior to the event start date.", which would have been August 29th 2024 for this application. This is apparently necessary to give sufficient time for things like consultations...
    • I'm sorry to see another chain opening up in the form of Holland and Barratt a couple of doors up from SMBS.  That will be another unfair pressure on SMBS .  I really hope people continue to support SMBS and its relative shop The Cheese Block under huge pressure with the arrival of Mons and Bora.  These are two of the oldest surviving (30 years plus?) green grocers, deli and unusual ingredient food shops in Lordship Lane and made it an interesting high street long before the chains and  newbies moved in.  I would think Healthmatters is none too happy either 😕 Support your local independent store or Lordship Lane will get really dull 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...