Ƶ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

“Business was better during the recession” - the story of a struggling retailer that sums up Britain in the 2020s

“There are days when we struggle to get into double figures. Some Saturdays we might take £30 all day"

Closed shops in Market Street, Leicester

It’s a story that is echoed up and down our high streets.

The owner of a small, city centre independent, trying to make ends meet as the nation’s shopping habits change out of all recognition.

Tim Hudson of Future Cycles isn’t alone when he speaks about days when barely a handful of customers come through the door.

And the image of city centre retailers in trouble continues outside.

His business is based in Leicester’s Market Street, a pedestrianised shopping area which once boasted a Fenwicks department store at one end, a three floor Dillons bookshop, a Tigers rugby merchandise shop and a Morrisons mini-market.

The McDonald’s at the city end still draws a crows, but Fenwicks is long-gone – the building currently being turned into a 121-bedroom hotel with short-stay apartments, with offices on the ground floor.

Tim Hudson runs Future Cycles in Leicester

The bookstore, rugby shop and mini-mart are also closed.

In fact, of the 35 units along that stretch of road, 13 are empty. It is an identical picture in Belvoir Street, just round the corner.