26 February 2025

Three stores closing soon: What's happening at the Canberra Centre?

| James Coleman
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Canberra Centre entrance

Canberra Business Chamber CEO Greg Harford says, “Everyone wants our flagship shopping mall to be vibrant and buzzing”. But is it? Photo: Michelle Kroll.

Zara was among the first international luxury brands to grace Canberra with its presence when it opened in the Canberra Centre in 2013.

But its security door will roll down for the last time next month after almost exactly 12 years of occupying 1500 sqm of prime real estate between Polo Ralph Lauren and The Coffee Club on level one.

Polo Ralph Lauren and BOSS are also understood to be leaving soon.

The Canberra Business Chamber says it’s a sad reflection of the shape of the local retail industry at the moment.

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“Customers are just not spending,” CEO Greg Harford told Region.

“Retail spending has been flat to declining in recent times, and there’s a lot of pressure. Net margins are absolutely tiny in retail and there are relatively high costs associated with keeping a store open when you look at rent, rates, power, staff.”

He said figures also show owners are spending more time in their businesses than before.

“That’s ultimately a way of managing costs for some firms, but it does put a much greater pressure on the owners of particularly the small retail businesses.”

Two ladies walking in the Canberra Centre

Online shopping remains a challenge for bricks and mortar retailers. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

The number of people opting to shop online, rather than in-store, also remains an ever-present undercurrent.

“Customers being extraordinarily price conscious are going online and migrating their shopping in a way that means it’s just not viable to keep these stores open,” Mr Harford says.

“So we’re definitely seeing a trend towards consolidation across the retail sector, with customers clearly prepared either to shop online or to travel a little bit further, and that may well play out in terms of more closures over time.

“And it’s really bad news for Canberra … Everyone wants our flagship shopping mall to be vibrant and buzzing.”

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It’s not all bad news, though.

While Muji and Tommy Hilfiger have both also vacated the Canberra Centre in recent years, they’ve been replaced by Seed and Forever New, and Uniqlo also took over a massive space on the ground floor, just off Bunda Street.

“There’s still good interest in the market,” Mr Harford says.

“I’d absolutely still have confidence that there is a future for other businesses in those premises.”

He said hospitality as a sector is also picking up as consumers “become more and more interested in consuming services and experiences, rather than physical goods”.

Man in a suit

Canberra Business Chamber CEO Greg Harford. Image: Canberra Business Chamber.

He’s less confident the Reserve Bank lowering the cash rate to 4.1 per cent will have much effect.

“It was good news that will presumably help retail a little bit, but we really need to see a lot more to come from the Reserve Bank before we can say we’ve turned that corner.”

He urges Canberrans to shop local, because shopping online “doesn’t help keep shops open and keep jobs here in Canberra”.

The Canberra Centre was contacted for comment.

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Capital Retro7:52 pm 26 Feb 25

There is a sure sign that we are in a cost of living crisis as when you get change from a purchase at any shop there are very old coins and a lot of commemorative ones indicating that people are raiding the piggy bank to make ends meet.
A lot of the pile-on gang won’t have a clue what I am talking about.

Jasmine Crampt7:49 pm 26 Feb 25

When you walk by Zara its a colourless and stiff environment, maybe they should have tried to look better if they want shoppers paying any attention to them 🤷

Hmmmm… soo many working from home. Retail stores missing out on all those potential shoppers who are no longer required to fill office spaces near these retail centres.
No surprise to me they aren’t profitable (or profitable enough) to keep trading.

I and many others simply avoid the city now. You’re punished going in, massive speed fines if even a crack over cycling speed, penalised with paid parking l.

Which until only recently the Canberra Centre was dumping their transaction fees on top of the parking fee penalty. Why not charge rent and wage and energy surcharge as well? You are forced to spend money to spend money in the city with around the clock parking penalties and a bus from anywhere off the main routes is unacceptably long and arduous. So why bother? Just go elsewhere when even a quick drive to a suburbam mall or surrounding country town is faster and free parking as though they actually want the business?

Canberra city is becoming a shanty town and no one is listening.

Perhaps the ACT government and Canberra Centre could consider punishing people less for going in?

I now avoid driving through, shopping or eating in Civic after getting a $300+ fine in the 40km/h zone. Too risky. Excessive fines discourage drivers, shoppers won’t come.

Jasmine Crampt7:44 pm 26 Feb 25

Have you tried not speeding? That’s a pretty great way to not get ~excessive fines~ from what Ive heard

I would put it down to foot traffic, nobody wants to work at the office therefore foot traffic is gone. anymore but once their retail is affected its always something else.

Limestone Jane3:53 pm 26 Feb 25

All those cheap clothing shops east side on ground floor with few utilitarian shops like newsagents, stationery, bookstores, opticians, design ware, as existed previously, makes for inefficient boring shopping experience. High rents don’t help.

Peter Graves6:48 pm 26 Feb 25

The Canberra Centre doesn’t contain a newsagent, anymore. It used to.

Canberra Centre is lame. Just buy online cheaper easier

Also need to consider traffic and parking issues getting into civic. Many people I know comment that never go to civic to shop anymore. I’m one of those – only as a last resort.

Rollersk8r882:44 pm 26 Feb 25

Completely agree. Government’s made it pretty clear they don’t want cars in Civic with the ridiculous 40km crawl from ANU into the CBD; plus selling off all the parking lots for development. Met a friend in Civic for the first time in years – and paid $11 to park near the law courts for an hour. As a family we’d only go into Civic 4 or 5 times a year; and that’s after cycling in to work there most days for 20 years.

MischaSimmons3:21 pm 26 Feb 25

That is a very good point! If you don’t make it easy for shoppers/drivers, they will no longer go.

Richard Bennett1:39 pm 26 Feb 25

Firstly, the money hungry owners of the centre have to have a hard look at them selves
1 rents are miles to high
2 solar panels on roof to help power prices
Entice the public with greater marketing …

Capital Retro12:07 pm 26 Feb 25

There is also global over production of consumer goods, including motor vehicles.
This was a contributing factor to the great crash in the 1930s.

Wouldn’t prices drop if there is an “over” supply?

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