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Another independent hardware shop calls it a day


A HARDWARE shop which has served Oxford for more than 50 years is set to close and could be turned into flats.

Broughtons, in North Parade, North Oxford, is closing down, with the building up for sale for £695,000.

Last week it emerged that Gill & Co, which has been in the city for 480 years, is to close at the end of next month.

The shop, in Wheatsheaf Yard, off High Street, has suffered a fall in trade and owner Victor Hunt decided to close instead of renewing the lease later this year.

Broughtons’ owner John Broughton, 65, is retiring and moving to Wolvercote to spend more time on his hobbies of cycling, photography, amateur radio and writing cycle route guides.

He said: “We first moved here on Bastille Day 1975, and I plan to close at the end of the month, although I could stay open a bit longer if I still have stock to sell.

“I thought it would be less complicated selling the property without including the business, so that’s what I’m doing.

“But if someone came along and bought the property, who wanted to keep the shop going, then I would be happy to sell them my stock.

“It’s going to be an enormous wrench, but I have been in retail for 50 years and the time has come to do something different.”

The shop could be turned into flats, according to estate agents Savills.

Broughtons was bought in 1975 as a joint venture by Mr Broughton, then 30, and his parents Henry and Winifred, who first set up in business in 1959, in St Clement’s.

The shop originally focused on TV rentals, but the family added general hardware and household lines and services such as key cutting.

Other independent hardware specialists say they are staying in business.

Mark Smith, manager of the Smith and Low hardware store, in Hollow Way, Cowley, said: “Hardware shops are dropping like flies at the moment, which is a shame.

“We’re doing okay in the present climate and people come back for the service and the bits that the big sheds don’t stock. This place is a real Aladdin’s Cave and I think there’s still a place for shops like us.”

Steve Gibson, 43, a carpenter from Cowley, said: “It’s a real shame these places are closing. When I heard Gill’s was going, I called the MP Andrew Smith to see if he could do anything about it.”

Stuart Silvester, who runs Silvester’s Stores, in Magdalen Road, East Oxford, said in April his shop could be forced to close if a controlled parking area was introduced.

The scheme is currently on hold, but Mr Silvester said: “I’m sorry to hear that Gill’s is closing, because it’s an Oxford institution.

“We have no immediate plans to close but if controlled parking is introduced, which was the plan earlier this year, then I think it could affect our trade.

“If the council does eventually decide to go ahead with it, then we will think seriously about closing, because I would rather get out and be solvent than go broke.”

affrench@oxfordmail.co.uk

  • Do independent shops have a future in the age of superstores? Write to: Letters to the Editor, Oxford Mail, Osney Mead, Oxford, OX2 0EJ, send emails to letters@oxfordmail.co.uk or have your say online



Your Say YourOxfordshire

rowdy, newquay says...
12:05pm Tue 13 Jul 10

I worked briefly at Gill&co in the early 60s when the owners were Mr & mrs Tree , the place and the people were real characters especially John the plumber.....

Headington-Heathcliff, oxford says...
1:00pm Tue 13 Jul 10

B&Q are often poor and Homebase are worse, but at least they have free parking and open on Sunday. I buy diy things on ebay too, so the cause of small shops closing is not so simple. Do young staff want to work long shop-counter hours?

Wallingford2, ox10 0ay says...
3:48pm Tue 13 Jul 10

Unfortunately any DIY shop that is closed on a Sunday is destined to close, it's the main DIY shopping day of the week. Still, 700K will soften the blow.

Ox56, Bicester says...
7:37pm Tue 13 Jul 10

I think Oxford City council have a responsibility to protect independent stores in the city and surrounding areas, I would like to see the council come out and support independent traders, offer free parking on week ends to shoppers and reduce rates that small traders with low annual turnovers. We've had enough of coffee shops and short term leases (and Tescos), Oxford
needs new investment in real shops if they want a strong retail industry in Oxford City Centre.
I suggest free week end parking to all to spend £50 in shops in Oxford.

Andrew:Oxford, Oxford says...
11:16pm Tue 13 Jul 10

Ox56 wrote:
I think Oxford City council have a responsibility to protect independent stores in the city and surrounding areas, I would like to see the council come out and support independent traders, offer free parking on week ends to shoppers and reduce rates that small traders with low annual turnovers. We've had enough of coffee shops and short term leases (and Tescos), Oxford
needs new investment in real shops if they want a strong retail industry in Oxford City Centre.
I suggest free week end parking to all to spend £50 in shops in Oxford.
No chance of free parking at weekends - there is already a premium for parking in the Westgate on a Saturday and who do you expect to implement the free-parking for over £50s? The (County) council can't even afford to implement it's favourite passtime - CPZs. Truth is, you have to sell an awful lot of individual nails at 12p each or various garden/household chemicals to even cover the cost of minimum wage staffing. It isn't the out-of-town warehouses that are killing the small shops - it's the efficient and personal service you get from ebay/Amazon/Play traders (who are often former small shop owners and now trade from stock they keep in their domestic garage). Templars Square offers free parking on Sundays - there you will find a number of independent, family run stores such as Wilkinsons (Wilkinson family), 99p Stores (Lalani family), B&M Bargains (Arora family), Stokes Greengrocers plus many more.

Comments are closed on this article.

John Broughton outside his North Parade shop John Broughton outside his North Parade shop

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