HOME | MONEY | REAL ESTATE | TRENDS |
October 23, 1999
NEWS
|
Will India be malled?A Brooke International Report
From the 1950s through the 1980s, retailing was confined to central business districts in most of the Indian cities. But as suburban population grew, many local shopping areas in suburbs transformed into regional shopping destinations. Most of the retail development in Indian cities has been in the form of strip or ribbon centers. These strip centers comprise several adjacent stores located along a major street. While the rest of the world has moved from shopping malls to power centers, India has yet to see a good mall development. From Hong Kong to Jakarta, malls are the places where more and more Asians go--not just to shop, but to eat and be entertained.
For a number of years, the Western retail pattern-large chains and big malls-has been looked upon as `the' model to strive for in India. Much discussion on its possibilities has taken place and retail chains have happened. But unlike in the West, no set pattern has emerged yet. It could also be attributed to the fact the disposable incomes have undergone a substantial increase only in last few years. Infact, property development has been corporatised only lately which was also a reason for lack of any attempt to look at real estate market beyond residential or commercial developments.
Malls require that the individual stores complement each other in the quality and variety of their product offerings, and the kind and number of stores are linked to the overall needs of the surrounding population. In order to run a mall successfully, a coordinated and cooperative long run centerwide retailing strategy is required. It then becomes the responsibility of the shopping mall manager/ owner to market the development as a marketing destination and to ensure the maintenance and day to day management of the mall. In the last couple of years, Indian developers made attempts in this direction. Spencer's Plaza in Chennai, the Piramals' Crossroads in Mumbai, the Ansal group's Ansal's Plaza in Delhi and Real Value Projects' Number One in Calcutta are examples of new professionally run malls. Although, Spencer Plaza Phase I was sold instead of being leased, the developer soon realised that selling means loss of control and creates hindrance in management of the entire development. And to ensure that the mall continues to be professionally run, Mangal Tirth has set up a mall management company, which will continue to run it even if the developers stop doing so. If developments like these can succeed, malls may be the incubator's for the retailing revolution.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
HOME |
NEWS |
ELECTION 99 |
BUSINESS |
SPORTS |
MOVIES |
CHAT |
INFOTECH |
TRAVEL SINGLES | BOOK SHOP | MUSIC SHOP | HOTEL RESERVATIONS | WORLD CUP 99 EDUCATION | PERSONAL HOMEPAGES | FREE EMAIL | FEEDBACK |