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How the retailing contest between CBDs, shopping centres and online will reshape our cities

Retail activity has been a defining facet of cities since antiquity.

The Greek Agora and Roman Forum may be viewed as the original CBDs – central business districts, or what urban planners call activity centres.

Retail spaces have evolved over time. Urbanisation, mass production and the rise of conspicuous consumption led to the high street and CBD dominating the retail landscape across the Western world from the late 19th century until the mid-20th century.

The 21st-century retail landscape has become more diverse and competitive.

The range of physical and virtual retail spaces, retailers, products and prices leaves consumers spoilt for choice.

Retailing is more than just about consumption.

It’s Australia’s fourth-largest employment sector and plays a major role in shaping our cities.

Retail helps define a city’s identity and brand and thus attract visitors. But the retail landscape and consumer behaviour are changing, and changing fast!

The place to be and be seen

In Australia (and elsewhere), the CBD was at the epicentre of the evolution of discrete retail spaces.

It offered a smorgasbord of independently owned shops, national and international chain stores and department stores.

These were located in laneways, shopping arcades, main streets and multistorey shopping centres.

Centrality, easy public transport access and a largely suburban-based commuter workforce explain the dominance of the CBD in the 20th century.

A visit to the CBD on a Saturday was more than just a utilitarian shopping trip.

It could be an urban exploration, a leisure pursuit, a pleasure-seeking adventure, a social event.

Children accompanying their parents were mesmerised by the intensity of urbanism and retail choice.

Teenagers and young people, much like 19th-century flaneurs, paraded with their peers, their fashion denoting their subcultural affiliation.

For adults, the CBD offered a chance to indulge in retail therapy via window shopping and pleasurable consumption. For others a trip to the CBD allowed them to treat themselves and meet friends at the department store cafe.

In short, the CBD was the place to see and be seen.

Shopping

CBD’s retail crown slips

The dominance of the CBD began to slip with the emergence of suburban shopping centres in the late 1950s – thank you, Victor Gruen.

Rapid suburban growth, social mobility and increased car use drove an explosion in suburban shopping centres from the 1960s through to the 1980s.

According to the Shopping Centre Council of Australia, an average of 22 shopping centres a year have been built since the first centre, Brisbane’s Chermside, appeared in 1957.

Competition between CBD retailers and shopping centres intensified in the 1980s and 1990s.

With the rise of online retailing in the past decade or so, these bricks-and-mortar retailers have had to lift their game again.

Retailing matters.

Aussie consumers spent a whopping A$353 billion on retail goods in 2022 compared with $275.3 billion in 2018 – a 28.2% increase.

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