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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

How chain store closures have changed East Midlands cities for good

New figures show the scale of store closures in cities such as Leicester, Derby and Nottingham

An empty Highcross shopping centre in Leicester(Image: Joe Giddens/PA Wire)

Almost 1,300 chain stores disappeared from East Midlands high streets last year – with even more closures forecast.

New figures show how the loss of high street names such as Debenhams, Top Shop and Burton – whose online operations have been bought – has left hundreds of empty units in our towns and cities, along with smaller independents and restaurants that won’t be returning.

Figures from business advisors PwC suggest at total of 17,500 chain store branches closed across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ last year – around 48 chain stores closing every day.

It said for every two chain store branches lost, one new store has opened, while retail parks had been more resilient to closures than city high streets and big shopping centres.

The PwC research compiled by the Local Data Company shows how the findings compare to five years ago in 2015, when East Midlands shop openings were at 750 and closures hit 887.

PwC said the real impact of the pandemic was yet to be felt as some stores “temporarily closed” during lockdowns, were unlikely to return when things such as the furlough scheme end.

The company said retail parks had seen the smallest number of net closures of any location, with 77 in the East Midlands, compared to shopping centres (159 closures), with high streets in general faring worst of all (490).

A spokesman said: “Footfall was already holding up better in retail parks before the pandemic due to their investment in leisure and some retail parks have benefitted by being anchored by essential retailers that have remained open, even during the tightest restrictions.