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Space planning is everything for interior retail/restaurant environments.
03/08/2025

Space planning is everything for interior retail/restaurant environments.

Experience the warm and inviting atmosphere of our beautifully decorated dining space! 🌟

Retail is still king in many cities and towns. Check this out - from Stanton Orchards. These tart cherry products are fl...
02/19/2025

Retail is still king in many cities and towns. Check this out - from Stanton Orchards. These tart cherry products are flooding all the healthy grocers throughout the U.S. Whole Foods Market, Natural Grocers and hundreds of other healthy grocers.

Launched today! BRADY BRAND! By introducing his very own brand BRADY, Tom is making a statement - he's not owned by any ...
01/12/2022

Launched today! BRADY BRAND!
By introducing his very own brand BRADY, Tom is making a statement - he's not owned by any one brand, other than his own. Brady Brand isn’t tied to any major sports apparel maker.
See the website here: https://www.bradybrand.com/collections/new

What is Brady Brand?
The launch collection includes 145 items across athleisure and office casual styles. The brand also plans to use a monthly drop schedule for new releases.

Under Armour, one of Brady’s biggest sponsors, struggled with its own entry into the athleisure world back in 2016, and passed on the Brady opportunity after bowing out of the fashion world.

As a result, Brady Brand was launched in collaboration with Jens Grede, who co-founded Kim Kardashian’s shapewear line, Skims.

This isn’t Brady’s first side hustle
In 2013, Brady and his trainer Alex Guerrero launched TB12 Sports Therapy Center, and TB12 has since expanded into a sprawling wellness brand that includes supplements, apparel, and physical therapy.

Brady already has one fan in his corner — his wife, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, who says he “likes clothes more than I do” and “has great taste.”

Want to be the judge of that yourself? Browse the collection here.
BRADY™ is the first technical apparel brand to apply two decades of pro sports level innovation and engineering to create a system of clothing that performs across every activity.

With over 3 years in development, our fabrics and materials fuse natural elements with cutting-edge technology. Designed with the body in mind. Built to move, breathe, and sweat while you compete, live and recover.

Created to inspire you to be your best, because whatever you do, life is a sport. We call our philosophy Lifeletics™.

Bringing together their collective experience in sports, design and manufacturing. BRADY™ is founded by Tom Brady, Jens Grede and Dao-Yi Chow.

Worth a visit! What a showplace and exciting new retail merchandising and apparel. Smashing presentation! In new space  ...
12/28/2021

Worth a visit! What a showplace and exciting new retail merchandising and apparel. Smashing presentation! In new space #221 at Tucson Mall
GUESS and FASTSIGNS of Tucson - Speedway Blvd.

Your Apple store doesn’t have these! Biodegradable phone case, saguaro style. tucsondesertwear.com By Shop Totally Tucso...
08/23/2021

Your Apple store doesn’t have these!
Biodegradable phone case, saguaro style. tucsondesertwear.com By Shop Totally Tucson and Totally Tucson.

Introducing the future of phones - a biodegradable phone case with absolutely no plastic. The material used for this phone case won’t add to the landfill, it becomes biodegradable in just 160 days. Made of PLA plant polymer with a bamboo binder. This is what you need today. Join the movement, stay...

The pandemic has changed shopping habits. Today, we take a look at what’s happening with malls in the U.S.--From The Mor...
08/10/2021

The pandemic has changed shopping habits. Today, we take a look at what’s happening with malls in the U.S.
--From The Morning, New York Times August 10, 2021

THE STATE OF THE AMERICAN MALL
Earlier this year, I received a flurry of text messages from my mother, who was at the going-out-of-business sale at our local Macy’s. I was floored — not by the deals, but because my childhood mall, the Crystal Mall in Waterford, Conn., was losing another big-box store. Sears exited a couple of years ago, and the mall has steadily lost tenants like the Gap, H&M and Abercrombie & Fitch. My teenage self would barely recognize the place today.

Similar declines have been playing out for years at many of the roughly 1,150 enclosed malls in the U.S., as people have turned to the internet, strip-center chains and outlets. But the pandemic accelerated challenges at some malls that were previously scraping by. Now, while the country’s most popular malls continue to perform relatively well, with steady foot traffic and occupancy, hundreds of others are grappling with major vacancies, fewer visitors and uncertain futures.

More than ever, American malls are a story of haves and have-nots. The real estate analytics firm Green Street estimates that at the 1,000 U.S. malls it tracks, there are about 750 vacant anchor boxes — vast spaces that once housed chains like Sears, Nordstrom and Macy’s. Those are hard to fill in normal times, but the past year has made it extraordinarily tough.

Changing habits
The plight of malls is significant for American communities and shows how quickly our habits have changed. Many people have a deep nostalgia for their local mall — it was often a hangout spot, a source for back-to-school clothing, or the scene of a first job. An internet subculture commemorates malls that have permanently closed.

But now, many are in a strange limbo. As vaccinations rolled out, pictures circulated of people receiving their shots at empty Sears or J.C. Penney locations. One former Macy’s in Vermont has been repurposed as a high school, while other malls are auctioned for pieces and turned into corporate offices. Deborah Weinswig, chief executive of Coresight Research, a global advisory and research firm, anticipates the rise of “dark malls” that exist solely to fulfill online orders for same-day or same-hour pickup.

Most malls took a hit during last year’s pandemic shutdowns and have struggled to attract customers back to the great indoors. A slew of bankruptcies, including J.C. Penney and Brooks Brothers, fueled closures. And healthy retailers decided to shutter their least-profitable stores, causing another exodus. More than 12,000 stores were announced for closures in 2020, according to CoStar Group, a data provider for the real estate industry.

Mannequins in a Brooks Brothers warehouse after the company declared bankruptcy.Amr Alfiky/The New York Times
“There’s no question the pandemic really widened the gap between the higher- and lower-quality malls in the country,” Vince Tibone, a senior analyst covering retail for Green Street Advisors, told me. “For the best one or two malls in any given market, there will still be tenant demand, there will still be consumers. And then the lower end is going to be even more challenged because they lost even more of their national tenants.”

The real estate industry gives grades to malls like report cards — A++ for top-tier malls, which can make $1,000 sales per square feet and often have tenants like Apple. A “C” mall produces far less in sales, probably has low occupancy and is deemed at risk of closing. Tibone said that many malls were downgraded during the pandemic as they lost tenants.

Vacant storefronts can be an eyesore, but as I wrote last year, many small mall tenants have clauses in their leases that allow them to pay reduced rent or even leave if two or more anchor stores depart, which can further exacerbate a mall’s issues. For some malls, the vacancies represent the start of a grim spiral. Even if the owners can see what’s happening, Tibone said, they often “don’t have the capital to keep these properties relevant and progressing with the future.”

Sapna Maheshwari covers retail for The Times. She invites readers to send their thoughts on the topic to [email protected].

Photo: A former Macy’s at the now-closed Metrocenter Mall in Glendale, Ariz. By Jesse Rieser for The New York Times

Just out - 8/3/21 - Culture / SKI Magaine:Here’s Why Brands are Still Opening Brick and Mortar Stores in the Age of Onli...
08/03/2021

Just out - 8/3/21 - Culture / SKI Magaine:
Here’s Why Brands are Still Opening Brick and Mortar Stores in the Age of Online Retail.

Blame it on Amazon. The online retail giant’s ubiquitous “smiling” boxes seem to be everywhere now. Granted, with much of the country under lockdown for the last year and a half, it makes sense that online shopping bloomed rapidly as it was one of the only ways American consumers could get anything from ski jackets to books to groceries.

This is why it seems odd that, while walking down Pearl Street in the outdoorsy city of Boulder, Colo., so many outdoor brands are popping up with their own retail storefronts. Helly Hanson, Nørrona, and Fjallraven have all opened up stores there over the past few years, and Black Diamond, Backcountry, and Stio recently opened their own shops as well.

And it’s not just in Boulder. Some brands, like Thule, are setting up shop in downtown Denver, Colo., and Rocky Mountain Underground is opening a new storefront location in Truckee, Calif.
Click here for more....
https://www.skimag.com/culture/outdoor-brands-open-physical-stores/?utm_campaign=SKI%20-%20NL%20&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=146231044&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8Bb2MKN4ZamwFnYDCYsJLWmXjeW7XUz_9hkV7Kbnf3vAQu2qQe_QQjvMJvjTFsxFbX0yITWezssY7-hWCMRb_IIo30KL0WNvcNeQJdoEnwtdVs9GY&utm_content=146231044&utm_source=hs_email

News August 3 via SKI Magazine - Thank you!

You can't get a free beer when you order skis online. Or get all touchy-feely with that new roof rack you've had your eyes on all summer.

INNOVATIVE TURNKEY STRATEGIES BENEFIT RETAILERS AND LANDLORDS
08/03/2021

INNOVATIVE TURNKEY STRATEGIES BENEFIT RETAILERS AND LANDLORDS

Both retailers and landlords are discovering the unique benefits of turnkey retail. Retailers enjoy the simplified approach to setting up a new location and landlords benefit by luring new and emerging brands to their centers.

Fun!
04/15/2021

Fun!

11/28/2020

Enjoy Downtown Tucson! Practice safe guidelines.

09/10/2020

Gaga for groceries. - from Stash 9-10-20

Amazon, the owner of Whole Foods, opened the first location of the grocery chain to operate entirely online last week in Brooklyn, New York. The store is located in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, but is not open to the public. Instead, it will serve solely as a fulfillment center for online grocery orders. Amazon reportedly hired hundreds of employees to work at the new location and to make deliveries.
The takeaway: The opening of this online-only store is a response to the massive increase in online grocery shopping in recent months as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. Amazon reported that online grocery sales tripled between the second quarter of 2019 and 2020. Amazon’s online grocery delivery capacity also increased by more than 160%

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