Royal Bank the latest retailer to leave 'Richmond Low' - Action News
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London

Royal Bank the latest retailer to leave 'Richmond Low'

The Royal Bank location on Richmond Street in downtown London is now no more, raising questions about the overall health of the retail section in the city's downtown core.

Move follows departure of Rexall, McDonald's from London's key downtown intersection

A vacant storefront on Richmond Street south of Dundas. Ongoing construction work on Dundas is hurting many retailers, though a city report says downtown vacancies are down compared to 10 years ago. (Andrew Lupton/CBC)

Another big-name retail tenant has left the area nearDundas and Richmond inLondon's downtown core.

Last week, people lined up during lunch hour to use the bank machinesat Royal Bank's branch at 383 Richmond St.By Monday,those machines were removed, with sheets ofplywood in their place.

The bank's move was announced last fall, with the opening of a new branchat Talbot Centre at 142 Fullarton St.

Itfollows last month's announcement that McDonald's is leavingMarket Tower and last year's departure of Rexallpharmacy from the northeast corner of Dundas and Richmond.

Is this just part of the regular retail turnover that downtowns go through, or does it point to a larger problem?

"Everybody's pulling out," said Peter Young, who owns Organic Traveller. The retail store sells marijuana pipes, rolling papers and other products. He's been doing business on Richmond, south of Dundas, for the past 25 years.

"If McDonald's can't make it in downtown London, we know something is wrong," he said.

Young calls the stretch of Richmond south of Queens "Richmond Low" a place he says struggles compared to Richmond Rowfurther north.

Sheets of plywood cover the spots where three ATMs were removed from the RBC location on Richmond Street near Dundas. (Andrew Lupton/CBC)

"It's kind of a ghost town now," he said. "They're spending all this money on Dundas Street ... and these stores are still pulling out."

He's referring, of course, to the ongoing project to turn Dundas Street into Dundas Place.

The city is in the second stage of a$15.6-million, two-year project to transform Dundas into a flex street. The bulk of the work will upgrade decades-oldinfrastructure below the ground but the revamp will also bring enhancements tobeautify the streetscape and make it possible to pedestrianize it for special events.

Many retailers have told CBC News the Dundas Place project is pinchingtheirbottom line, with the street closed to cartraffic for months while metal fencing surrounds the storefronts.

The first stage of the project wrapped up late last year. This spring, crowds came to the now-completed section of DundasStreet west of Richmond to watch two Toronto Raptors playoff games on thethe big screen.

The second and final stage of the project between Richmond and Wellington isn't scheduled to be finished until latefall.

Gerald Gallacher, board chair for Downtown London, agrees that construction has hurt someretailers but says businesses move for a host of reasons.

The Rexall pharmacy at the corner of Dundas and Richmond Street closed in May 2018. (Andrew Lupton/CBC)

"There's not one big silver bullet that's cause all of this," he said. "It's a lot of little things that have compounded.Even some of the malls are struggling to keep retailers with the costs of rent."

The State of Downtown report released last year pointed to a recent decrease in retail vacanciesfor the downtown core. Between 2000 and 2007 the vacancy rate was between 11 and 18 per cent.In 2016 and 2017, it was7.2 per cent and 7.0 per cent, respectively. The same report says a"healthy" vacancy rate is considered to be between five and nine per cent.

All three of the now-departed tenants Rexall, RBC and McDonald's operated out of buildings owned byShmuel Farhi, who owns numerous downtown properties.Calls placed to his downtown office for comment were not returned on Monday.

Work on Dundas Street between Richmond and Wellington is scheduled to be complete by late fall of this year. (Kerry McKee/CBC)

Gallachersaid he believes business will pick up when the work on Dundas isdone. He expects to see many of the empty storefronts filled, and says some merchants might be waiting until the last cobble stone is laid before entering a newlease.

"I'm hoping when the construction work gets done, it will be a bright, vibrant place," he said. "It is a space that will attract peopleand the more it gets used, the better."