Plymouth retail news
Game: Full list of store closures revealed
Entertainment retailer Game has today closed 277 stores after calling in administrators this morning.
Twelve more TJ Hughes stores to close
A further 12 TJ Hughes stores are to close, administrator Ernst & Young has revealed.
M&S found guilty over asbestos failings
Marks and Spencer has been found guilty of putting construction workers, staff and shoppers at risk of exposure to asbestos during refurbishment work at its Reading store.
-
Tailor cuts £1 rent deal for pop-up in Birmingham
-
HMV to close Brent Cross store
-
Beales acquires Robbs of Hexham
-
M&S faces prosecution over alleged asbestos-related breaches
-
East of England Co-op to sell non-food stores
-
Virgin Media steps up retail expansion with 50-store plan
-
Kinnaird unveils Envy growth plans
-
Retail Interiors Awards 2007
-
Retail Week Awards 2007: the winners
-
Sales slump at Ottakar's
-
Game previews Nintendo DS
-
Land Securities sells £115 million of retail space
-
Plymouth Co-op turns to ntl to pep up delivery
-
Retail Property - Shopping centre boom continues in 2004
-
Property news - Plymouth City Council set to back retail plan
-
The Range opens in Colchester
-
Solutions products - Co-op chooses Reflex
-
Inditex to push lesser known brands in UK
-
HMV begins closing stores
-
Morrisons hopes England World Cup backing will drive footfall
-
381 further First Quench shops to close, making 1,908 redundancies
-
Trading Bargains to ramp up expansion
-
Dunelm ups market share
-
Fat Face adds eight stores as UK expansion gathers pace
-
Moss Bros unveils Cardiff flagship
-
Music Zone to close 31 stores
-
Kingston retailers say yes to BID rate hike
-
Morgan Stanley buys Plymouth city centre scheme
-
Culpeper raises £1m war chest
-
Midas touch at Tesco
-
Berwin & Berwin to set up within House of Fraser
-
Profits treble at shoe store group
-
Property News - Government announces shortlist for BID scheme
Plymouth retail in depth
What makes a successful retail scheme?
Development largely disappeared in the wake of the recession and remains subdued. What will be the characteristics of those schemes that get off the ground? Tim Danaher reports








