REVIVING MAIN STREETS What you need to know? What do you need to do? Chris McNeill Director Spade Consultants Pty Ltd June 2015
What is a main street? A Main Street is the traditional town centre structure around which a town’s retail, commercial, government and cultural activities were organised For historical reasons, a Main Street tends to be a relatively fine grain of land ownership, particular in the traditional retail area Main Streets come in all sorts of shapes and sizes Some play a traditional role, while some represent a hybrid model Not all Main streets need ‘reviving’
What is a main street? Traditional v Hybrid
What is a main street? Struggling v Bustling
Is Main Street still relevant? Due to land fragmentation, traditional town centres struggle to provide large format retail activities (which, like it or not, represent the retail anchors that modern retail activity is built around) For the same reason, they struggle to provide bulky goods opportunities and campus style office opportunities They frequently struggle to provide car parking that responds to modern retail, business and government interactive activities Does the Main Street model represent a historical anachronism?
Is Main Street still relevant? On the other hand The traditional Main Street still represents the personification of a town’s identity In almost all regional towns and cities the town centre remains the hub of public activity and commercial enterprise There is great pride taken in the appearance of Main Streets
Can Main Streets be allowed to fail? In regional centres, there are rarely alternative economic uses for main street properties (little to no adaptation to residential uses) A failed Main Street is almost certainly an egg that cannot be unscrambled A failed Main street will likely become the enduring public image of your town
Characteristics of the contemporary Main Street Regional cities and towns represent the purest form of urban hierarchy Traditional Main Streets remain largely unchallenged They generally have a monopoly position In the larger regional cities retail activity may be partly decentralised but commercial (office) activity is generally centralised It is frequently difficult to consolidate land, planning outcomes are challenging and the cost of redevelopment is high. There is often little incentive to redevelop Despite the problems, the model generally works
But not always
But not always
Why do Main Streets fail? Competition from afar Competition from within Why is somewhere else more attractive? Poor presentation/image Public safety concerns Poor retail mix Lack of key attractors
Small rural townships are often hardest hit
What we need to know There’s not much we can do about the ‘next town’ but there’s plenty we can do about our town Firstly, in larger regional towns and cities, if it is agreed that Main Street is to be protected it is important to establish an activity centre hierarchy and stick to it This may not always be easy After all, convenience shopping is supposed to be convenient It will be argued that land fragmentation prevents development of the large format retail activites that modern shoppers demand. Sometimes that argument is sound Need to have a good understanding of the town’s prospects and needs
When Main Street is no longer the main game
Amsterdam, New York State
The fine line that is edge of centre development
Sometimes, there never was a Main Street
Play to your advantages Encourage and leverage off entrepreneurial traders Views can be sold. Perhaps they should be encouraged. Incentives to rejuvenate landmark buildings Large format can be edge of centre but connectivity is critical Establish a realistic activity centre heirarchy
Be aware of the economic fundamentals Investors are keen for capital growth Certain yields are vital for investors and why you’re likely to see an empty shop for lease at 60k per annum than an occupied shop at 40k per annum
Commercial and other employment activity is just as important as retail
It’s a fine line…………..