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Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post
Business
William Telford

Plymouth's ex-Debenhams block set to be split up after £3.5m purchase

Plymouth’s empty former Debenhams building is set to be split up into two or more shops by new owners who are buying it for more than £3.5m.

Completion of the purchase of the six-storey, city centre block is imminent and it is understood the new owners are keen for the ground floor to remain as retail space - but will divide it up.

The exact division of the ground floor will depend on the requirements of tenant businesses. It could become two units, either of equal size or one being larger, with one opening onto New George Street and the other onto Royal Parade.

But it could also be divided into three, with a third shopfront opening onto Bedford Way, the pedestrianised passage that unites the two roads. It is understood the new owners of the former department store are still considering uses for the upper floors.

The purchaser has not yet been revealed but the building attracted widespread interest from developers after it went on the market in July 2021 and an offer in excess of the £3.5m asking price was made in the autumn.

The 159,259sq ft building, which has six floors including a basement, has been vacant since Debenhams closed it in May 2021. The building’s lease is owned by property giant British Land but it is selling it as a “virtual freehold”, a lease for 985 years, which means it doesn’t expire until December 20, 3006.

The actual freehold is owned by Plymouth City Council, but the building is in a block of buildings for which British Land paid £67m for in 2016 and which also includes the huge House of Fraser store.

Commercial property experts at Vickery Holman and Allsop marketed the building jointly and when it went on the market it was advertised as ripe for being reconfigured into a range of potential uses, including shops, a cinema, offices and co-working space, and even, somewhat surprisingly, student accommodation.

Trouble retailer Debenhams shut its entire portfolio of more than 90 UK stores in 2021, with about 12,000 workers losing their jobs, closing the door on more than 200 years of trade on the high street.

The Debenhams brand continued online after being bought by retailer Boohoo for £55m in January. The company traces its roots to 1778 when William Clark opened a shop in London's West End, selling fabrics, bonnets and parasols. In 1813, William Debenham invested in the firm and it was renamed Clark & Debenham..

At one time it was the UK’s largest department store chain, but in recent years struggled with falling profits and rising debts, as more shopping moved online. It called in administrators twice in two years, most recently in April 2020. When the Covid pandemic caused closure of non-essential retail outlets it was the death knell for Debenhams and other retailers such as Top Shop-owner Arcadia.

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