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Originally Posted by jsbrook
I am not sure the point you're tying to make. I hardly have a 'hard-on' for Bloomingdales. But I shop there and don't really shop at Macy's. I could care less about cache or reputation in the fashion industry. What matters is that they sell some nice clothes (in my opinion, still generally much better than Macy's, any decline in stock or prestige notwithstanding). That's all the average shopper really cares about. The fact that it's not Neiman or Barney's is a good thing. Doesn't bankrupt you. I don't think Philly currently has the concentration of wealth to support a full-fledged Neiman Marcus or Barney's. Not even on Rittenhouse Square. Sorry. Anyway, this is getting far afield. I don't seen 1911 Walnut as an ideal location for Bloomindales (neither would I expect a Neiman, Barney's or any similarly priced large sized, full line department store to land there)
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Not to start an argument, but I wholeheartedly disagree with you.
The average household income of Center City is now up to $107,000. The average household income of Rittenhouse Square is now $115,638. To give you an idea, this is more than or on par with the majority of the Main Line which has all of these stores in KOP. This is also more than or on par with the majority of San Francisco's core neighborhoods, which also has all of these stores Downtown. It also on par with the Near North Side in Chicago, which also has all of these stores downtown.
We can no longer say Center City doesn't have the cache of wealth which other cities have because it most certainly does. I think it's really just a combination of lazy commercial brokers looking to make a quick buck to the first tenant willing to pay and not shopping around, and outdated stereotypes on the city and not up-to-date information.
I mean, a Verizon store at 15th and Walnut in a brand new construction building? WTF? This should be a Gucci or Louis Vuitton, or at very least a Ted Baker or Tory Burch. F**cking Santander also outbid Marc Jacobs for the second retail spot in 1616 Walnut. Seriously?
What the city needs is better marketing. We need to get the word out that Center City is coming back to high-end retailers. Show them the wealth figures in comparison to other US cities, and show them the growing tourism numbers. On top of that, we need City Council members with a vision; one's that will place an overlay on Walnut Street banning banks and cell phone stores. We also need commercial brokers with a vision, who are willing to go out there and get the word out to the top retailers that Center City is hot and it's here.
No reason we should have lost Burberry because Michael Kors was willing to bid more when there are other availability on Walnut. No reason to lose Marc Jacobs to a bank. No reason to lease a prime new construction spot on Walnut to a cell phone store which has 40 other locations in the city. We should be getting Tory Burch, Ted Baker, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, David Yurman, Long Champ, etc. We should be getting KOP stores in Center City.
http://articles.philly.com/2015-04-09/bu...-city-district-household-income-old-city