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E-scooter retailer Pure Electric continues expansion with new Plymouth store

Company prepares to open 18th º£½ÇÊÓÆµ outlet a it targets having 500 stores across Europe by 2028

The new Pure Electric store in Plymouth(Image: William Telford)

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s leading retailer of electric bikes and scooters is to open a store in Plymouth city centre – even though e-scooters remain illegal to use in public.

Pure Electric has taken a lease on the prominent and quirky Rotunda building, at Charles Cross, as the company continues its rapid expansion throughout the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and across Europe.

Only founded in 2019, Pure Electric will make Plymouth its 18th º£½ÇÊÓÆµ outlet, the nearest being in Bristol, and has already opened in several European cities such as Paris and Madrid, targeting 500 stores by 2028. In 2020 Pure Electric took over 11 Halfords' Cycle Republic stores that had been earmarked for closure

In Plymouth, branding has gone up at the Rotunda, which became vacant when Evans Cycles moved to larger premises in New George Street in 2020.

E-scooter retailer Pure Electric is moving into the Rotunda in Plymouth city centre(Image: William Telford)

Joanne High, who heads the Plymouth office of property consultants Vickery Holman, confirmed the letting and said the firm wanted to wait until signage appeared before announcing their arrival.

“They are a nationwide firm and are expanding quickly,” she said. “They sell electric scooters and bikes.”

However, the latter remain illegal to use on public roads, pavements, parks or car parks in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, and in Plymouth.

Police, who have received an increasing number of reports of e-scooters being used illegally, have with owners potentially receiving fines and penalty points.