Your neighbourhood mall is likely seeing a major decline in revenues as an increasing number of consumers fill their shopping baskets with just the click of a mouse.
The decline is evident in indoor shopping centres that were once considered community hubs in many neighbourhoods in Canada and the U.S., says Doug Stephens, author of âReengineering Retail.â
In Torontoâs west end, the Kipling Queensway Mall has several vacant stores as it struggles to attract tenants.
In Oshawa, Ont., a former Target store at the 5 Points Mall is being redeveloped into a self-storage facility. And in Torontoâs Malvern Town Centre, which endured Zellers and Target closures, lost its No Frills anchor last month, leaving behind a 70,000-sq. ft. space.
Stephens says the changes taking place in the retail landscape are âenormous.â
âIt really is a bit of a revolution,â he told CTVâs Your Morning on Wednesday. One major aspect driving that transformation, he said, is the explosion of e-commerce.
âConsumers are increasingly moving online and whatâs really concerning about that for Canadian retailers, is that 60 cents of every incremental dollar that gets spent online now, is going directly to Amazon,â Stephens said. âItâs not even going to conventional retailers, so thereâs a lot of catch-up that needs to be made.â
Thirty years ago, the neighbourhood mall was âreally the apex of convenienceâ and one-stop shopping, Stephens said. It was also a hub for social interaction.
âIf you were a young person, the mall was where you hung out, and now you hang out on Facebook, or you hang out on social media,â he said.
Stephens said the challenge now for malls is reinvention. âHaving 100 brand names under one roof isnât good enough anymore, so I think weâre going to see the introduction of more food, more entertainment, youâre going to see more community events being held in malls.â
He added: âWhen you look at where the mall started in history, it was really the centre of life for a community, and I think thatâs where weâre going to go back to.â
Despite the challenges, some top-tier malls are thriving in Canada
According to the Retail Council of Canadaâs 2016 shopping mall study, these were the top malls in Canada, by sales per square foot, per year:
Yorkdale Shopping Centre, Toronto: $1,651
- Oakridge Shopping Centre, Vancouver: $1,537
- CF Pacific Centre, Vancouver: $1,523
- CF Toronto Eaton Centre, Toronto: $1,488
- Southgate Shopping Centre, Edmonton: $1,155
Stephens says those malls are successfully attracting foot traffic by carrying brands that shoppers are hard-pressed to find elsewhere.
âYou canât go to a Louis Vuitton store ⌠in every mall in the country,â he said.
But as Amazon looks to branch out into luxury retail, even those malls may have their work cut out for them.
According to Stephens, 10 per cent of merchandise bought in Canada is purchased online. He sees that increasing to 30 or even 40 per cent over the next decade.
âThatâs going to put increasing pressure on retailers to really improve what theyâre doing and give consumers a reason to get in the car, put down their computer and go to mall,â Stephens said.