Quote:
Originally Posted by thewave46
Eh, the Retail Apocalypse has been going on for awhile. Multiple major retailers have struggled since 2008. The over-retailed thing has come to haunt us. It probably will for awhile, because the one’s ability to consume the sheer amount of crap pumped out was always going to be a limiting factor of how much retail we actually needed.
Restaurants? They’ll just get more expensive, and marginal business-case ones will flounder. It might just go back to them being an actual luxury thing. What I hope is that some of the chains that have become ubiquitous will wash away with the tide going out. If one is going to be spending bucks to go out, might as well enjoy some local flavour instead of just going to Kelsey’s or something like that.
|
My observation has been an increasing number of national chains and fewer independent businesses in Ontario. I haven’t seen this happen as much in BC.
In the part of the Vancouver area in which I live, Starbucks closed several locations in early 2021, but in the meantime a local chain has opened a new coffee shop nearby, another local chain extended its hours, and a new independent Italian shop opened where my local Starbucks used to be.
Meanwhile I’ve been in Toronto and London over the past week. London is more beholden to chain restaurants and chain retailers than ever before, and even Toronto is moving in that direction. There’s been a continued proliferation of Tim Hortons in Toronto that we simply haven’t been seeing in the Vancouver area, even with the loss of numerous Starbucks locations.
As a point of comparison, the city of New Westminster has a Tim Hortons location density of about 7.1 per 100,000 people (not counting institutional locations), while the Byron-Lambeth-River Bend area of London has a Tim Hortons density of 15.2 per 100,000. Independent businesses just seem to thrive better in BC, even outside major city cores.