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Types of Retail Locations and Site Selection

This chapter discusses the different types of retail locations, including isolated stores, unplanned business districts, and planned shopping centers. It also covers the criteria for evaluating general retail locations and specific store sites.

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Types of Retail Locations and Site Selection

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  1. Chapter 10 Site Selection Dr. Pointer Notes

  2. Chapter Objectives • To thoroughly examine the types of locations available to a retailer: isolated store, unplanned business district, and planned shopping center • To note the decisions necessary in choosing a general retail location • To describe the concept of one-hundred percent location

  3. Chapter Objectives_2 • To discuss several criteria for evaluating general retail locations and the specific sites within them • To contrast alternative terms of occupancy

  4. Overview • Step 1: investigate alternative trading areas (Chapter 9) • Step 2: type of location is desirable determine what • Step 3: select the general location • Step 4: evaluate alternative specific store sites • Chapter 10 discusses steps 2-4

  5. 3 Types of Locations Isolated Store Planned Shopping Center Unplanned Business District

  6. Isolated Site • An isolated site is a freestanding retail outlet located on either a highway or a street. No adjacent retailers to share traffic • In the past, the mass merchandisers were forced to use this type of site. • Today, diverse retailers elect this site type—Krispy Kreme Donuts, Target, McDonald’s,

  7. Advantages No competition Low rental costs Flexibility Good for convenience stores Better visibility Adaptable facilities Easy parking Disadvantages Difficulty attracting customers Travel distance Lack of variety for customers High advertising expenses No cost sharing Restrictive zoning laws Isolated Stores

  8. Unplanned Business District • Unplanned business district is a type of retail location where 2 or more stores are situated together (close proximity) in such a way that the total arrangement or mix of stores is not due to prior long-range planning.

  9. Unplanned Business Districts Secondary Business District Central Business District Neighborhood Business District String District

  10. Secondary Business Districts • SBD is an unplanned shopping area in a city or town that is usually bounded by the interception of 2 major streets. • Usually the same type of goods and services are sold as in the central business district • Major strengths is good product selection and access to major thoroughfares and public transportation.

  11. Neighborhood Business Districts • NBD is an unplanned shopping area that appeals to the convenience shopping and service needs of a single residential area • Usually has several small stores, dry cleaner, stationery store, a barbershop/beauty salon, liquor store, and restaurant. • Advantages are good location, store hours, parking less hectic atmosphere.

  12. String Shopping Area • A string is an unplanned shopping area comprising a group of retail stores, often with similar or compatible product lines located along a major street • example – group of auto dealers located side by side

  13. Central Business District • A central business district (CBD) is the hub of retailing in a city, same as downtown. • Greatest density of office building and no more than a 1 sq mile, with cultural and entertainment facilities surrounding it. • Reasons for popularity- good product assortment, access to transportation, variety of customers and stores. • Weaknesses – poor parking, traffic and delivery congestion, relatively poor image, high rent and taxes for most popular cites.

  14. The Planned Shopping Center • A planned shopping center consists of a group of architecturally unified commercial establishments on a site which is centrally owned and managed. Galleria, Memorial City Mall, Willowbrook Mall • Uses concept of balanced tenancy – stores complement each other as to quality and variety of product offerings-

  15. Advantages Well-rounded assortments Strong suburban population One-stop, family shopping Cost sharing Transportation access Pedestrian traffic Disadvantages Limited flexibility Higher rent Restrictions on offerings Competitive environment Requirements for association memberships Too many malls Domination by anchor stores Planned Shopping Centers

  16. Types of Planned Shopping Centers • Regional shopping Center- mega malls – Mall of American in Minnesota • Community Shopping Center including a powercenter –is shopping center with up to 6 –12 category killers and mix of smaller stores most are complementary stores lifestyle centersopen air shopping center with a upscale specialty stores, • Neighborhood Shopping Center

  17. How Important are Planned Shopping Centers • 46,000 U.S. Shopping Centers • 1200 are fully enclosed • Shopping center revenues exceed $1.2 trillion annually • Employee 11 million people • 94% of Americans over 18 yrs of age visit average of once a month • Many older shopping centers are being renovated, expanded or repositioned

  18. Renovations to Sustain Growth • The Florida Mall, Orlando, Florida • King of Prussia, Pennsylvania • Park Place, Tucson, Arizona • Roosevelt Field, Long Island, New York • University TowneCenter, San Diego, California

  19. Table 10.1 A Characteristics of Centers

  20. Table 10.1 B Characteristics of Centers

  21. Table 10.1 C Characteristics of Centers

  22. Location and Site Evaluation One-hundred Percent Location The optimum site for a particular store

  23. Location and Site Evaluation • One –hundred percent locations – optimum site for the particular store type • The requirements for a one hundred percent location will vary by retail type

  24. Pedestrian Traffic- number and type of people Vehicular traffic- number &type of vehicles, congestion level Parking Facilities Transportation Store composition Specific Site Terms of Occupancy Overall rating Location Evaluation Checklist

  25. Pedestrian Traffic • The most crucial measures of a location’s and site’s value are the number and type of people passing by. • Proper pedestrian traffic count should include • age and gender (exclude very young children) • count by time of day • pedestrian interviews • spot analysis of shopping trips

  26. Vehicular Traffic • Important for • convenience stores • outlets in regional shopping centers • car washes • suburban areas with limited pedestrian traffic

  27. Parking Considerations • Number and quality of spots • Distance of spots from stores • Availability of employee parking • Price to charge customers for parking

  28. How Many Parking Spaces? • Shopping centers = 4-5 spaces per 1000 square feet of gross floor space • Supermarkets = 10-15 spaces per 1000 square feet of gross floor space • Furniture stores = 3-4 spaces per 1000 square feet of gross floor space

  29. Terms of Occupancy Considerations • Ownership versus Leasing- with adequate funding ownership could be good option, • Type of Lease • Operations and Maintenance Costs • Taxes • Zoning Restrictions • Voluntary regulations

  30. Advantages of Ownership • Lease renewal is not an issue • Monthly mortgage rate is stable • Operations are flexible • May be able to take advantage of site appreciation • Other ownership issues – construct new facility or renovate existing property

  31. Disadvantage of Ownership • Might require more upfront capital • Long term commitment • Inability to readily change sites Most facilities are leased Leasing minimizes initial investment, reduces risk, reduces long term commitment and allows access to prime site and occupancy time may be immediate.

  32. Types of Leases Straight Lease Maintenance- increase recoupment lease Percentage Lease Graduated Lease Net Lease

  33. Types of Leases • Straight lease – retailer pays a fixed amount per month over life of lease • Percentage Lease – rent is related to sales or profits • Graduated lease – precise increase in amount over a stated period of time • Maintenance-increase-recoupement lease – has a provision allowing rent to increase if property owners expenses increases • Net lease – Calls for all maintenance costs such as lighting, heating, insurance etc be paid by retailer

  34. Other Considerations • Need to calculate the total costs of operating and maintenance for a site. • Differences in sales taxes by locations could be a factor

  35. Questions Please read chapter

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