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Retail & Consumer

New Eldon Square general manager hails city shopping centre's pandemic bounceback

Cormac Hamilton says the management team are in talks with a number of operators keen to fill remain empty units

Cormac Hamilton, general manager of Eldon Square(Image: staff photo)

The new manager of Newcastle shopping centre Eldon Square has told how the destination has emerged strongly from the pandemic to be one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s best performers.

Like other shopping centres around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, Eldon Square suffered during the pandemic and the many lockdowns, having already taken a hammering as a result of the changing retail landscape. Big name retailers Dorothy Perkins, Debenhams and Top Shop are among the firms which have collapsed in recent years, the latter two leaving large empty units at the city centre.

But despite ongoing economic uncertainty and rising inflation, latest research from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) showed operators are now investing in store openings across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, with Eldon Square among those benefiting from the increasing optimism. Since former owners Intu collapsed, the centre it has been owned by administrators and managed by specialist investment manager Catella APAM and property management company MAPP.

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Cormac Hamilton started his new role as general manager for MAPP last November, and said Eldon Square is now at 97% occupancy, with hopes high that the empty Debenhams and Top Shop units will be filled soon. He said the centre is in talks with five operators looking to take on the empty Debenhams department store to give it a new lease of life, almost two years after it closed its doors.

He said his new role at the centre – which has 140 retail and leisure operators including John Lewis, Fenwick, Apple, Boots and Next, employs 4,000 people and covers 1.35m sq ft – marks the fruition of a long held ambition.

A former Royal Marine, he has managed shopping centres across the country with his experience ranging from the regional management of over 30 shopping centres in the Midlands to managing centres in Exeter, Hartlepool, Lincoln and Wakefield. He has also been chair of the Wakefield High Street Task Force, Savills National Shopping Centre management executive, and national lead for the Savills mystery shop programme.

He said: “The North East is a region that I love and when it comes to Eldon Square, the vision and values really resonate with me. The focus on community inclusion and experiential shopping very much aligns with my ambitions and goals of bringing the centre, and indeed the industry, into a new era; finding out what our customers, retailers, cafes and restaurants really value and then delivering on that.