After the delays, we reveal traders set for Allders kiosks

EXCLUSIVE: Months late, and with only six of the seven units allocated, Westfield is finally about to find a use for part of the town centre’s former department store. By STEVEN DOWNES 

Slow motion: Westfield will be opening just two of their Allders kiosks this week. The others? Who knows?

More than a year after being granted planning permission for seven kiosks in a “meanwhile use” of the ground floor of the Allders building on North End, Westfield today notified their few remaining tenants of the Whitgift Centre that new stores will be opening this Friday.

Just not all of them. Not yet, anyway…

And just as with so much that Westfield has offered since they arrived in Croydon more than a decade ago, it looks like too little, too late, and with yet more broken promises.

But they have given it a new name: “Allders Parade”, as if it is some out-of-the-way, provincial parade of shops, which would usually perhaps include a bookies, a newsagents and a “hair salon”, rather than the once proud focus of town centre trade.

Florists: Isle of Flowers is one of several kiosk-holders who are already Westfield tenants elsewhere in London

The kiosks have been the focus of much positive spinning by Croydon’s increasingly desperate Mayor, piss-poor Jason Perry, who has been leading guided tours of gawping property speculators behind the hoardings to see the vacant frontage of the once proud department store.

But the reality is that, despite the council bending over backwards to grant planning permission in record time last summer, the kiosks are still opening months later than hoped.

And instead of seven kiosks in operation, Westfield – now trading as the Paris-based Unibail Rodamco Westfield – have named just six. Of which just two will be ready for business later this week.

Inside Croydon can reveal that the”confirmed” new tenants are:

  • Sky – the broadcast media giant already has outlets at Westfield’s Stratford and Shepherds Bush shopping malls
  • Miniso – the Chinese “lifestyle and design-led product retailer” – a homeware shop. Also with a store in Westfield Stratford.
  • Isle of Flowers – florists. Also with a store in Westfield Stratford.
  • Coco and Nut – coffee shop and caff. They have a branch in Sanderstead
  • Melting Moments – ice creams. Kiosk delays means they have missed this summer’s trade. Previously traded in the old Allders.
  • Abaci – “fashion retailer”, according to Westfield. Turkish-manufactured hijabs and Islamic clothing.

And that’s it. Excited? Yeah…

Having the frontage of the old Allders, from No2 to No28 North End, opened up once again will undoubtedly help relieve some of the sense of a high street wasteland. But it is hard to see this collection of Westfield tenants providing the transformation so desperately needed.

The Allders building has been closed since 2019, when the then Labour-run council sent in a team of bailiffs to kick out the various small businesses that had set up shop in the empty building, the bizarre bazaar that was the Croydon Village Outlet. These were pop-ups. It is telling that it has taken Westfield five years to come up with a replacement for the Allders pop-ups: more pop-ups.

As recently as July, none other than Mayor Perry himself was boostering the scheme, saying, “This autumn, seven new units will open in the refurbished shopfront.” True to form, Perry and his mates at Westfield, have managed to over-promise and under-deliver. Again.

No explanation has been given for the delays in opening, or the 14% shortfall in traders taking up the Westfield kiosks.

Nothing to show for 13 years of Westfield: property speculators have been allowed to gawp at the empty kiosks in the ‘Allders Parade’

The announcement sent to Whitgift and Centrale shopping centre tenants this morning came from Dominique Stagg, the marketing manager for the Westfield-owned malls.

“We are pleased to share some exciting news for Croydon town centre: the historic Allders building on North End is being brought back to life as Allders Parade – a new parade of shops that will enhance the offer alongside Centrale and Whitgift.

“The North End frontage of the building has been sensitively refurbished, creating four new shops and two food and beverage units. This development will introduce a mix of local, regional and national retailers, providing a fresh boost of activity and confidence in Croydon’s future,” Stagg wrote to her long-neglected tenants.

“The shops will open in phases, starting this Friday with the first two stores, followed by further openings every fortnight through October.”

 

And according to the person employed by URW as a marketing manager, after 13 years of her company’s broken promises to Croydon, “This is an important milestone for Unibail Rodamco Westfield as they continue to invest in Croydon, creating vibrant retail, leisure and community spaces. We look forward to welcoming these new tenants and the additional footfall they will bring to North End and the wider town centre.” Whoop-de-fucking-whoop.

In her sign-off, Stagg encouraged her company’s tenants “to share this positive news with your teams and customers”.

Positive news. Pass it on.

Read more: ‘Permanently closed’: Whitgift Centre works mark end of days
Read more: Council rushes through permission for seven kiosks in Allders
Read more: Hammer blow for Whitgift Centre with new delay to masterplan
Read more: Millionaire pulls plug on Mayor Perry’s ‘big idea’ for Allders
Read more: Tories warn residents: don’t be ‘negative’ about Allders murals


Inside Croydon – If you want real journalism, delivering real news, from a publication that is actually based in the borough, please consider paying for it. Sign up today: click here for more details


  • If you have a news story about life in or around Croydon, or want to publicise your residents’ association or business, or if you have a local event to promote, please email us with full details at inside.croydon@btinternet.com
  • As featured on Google News Showcase

About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
This entry was posted in "Hammersfield", Allders, Business, Croydon Council, Mayor Jason Perry, Planning, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Whitgift Centre and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

14 Responses to After the delays, we reveal traders set for Allders kiosks

  1. Adrian Waters says:

    Your poll is a little unfair as it only allows extreme ends of potential viewpoints. My view is neither of the options given. Primarily I am disappointed that this has taken so long but if it improves the look of the Allders building then it’s better than nothing.

    I would like to hear an explanation from pp Perry of why it has taken so long to get this organised.

    • “Better than nothing”. After 13 years. My, haven’t you had your expectations pummelled into a pulp after all these years of empty promises.

      Our polls are not scientific, nor are they “fair”.

      And if you’re waiting for an explanation from Piss Poor Perry, Croydon’s failed Mayor, don’t hold your breath.

    • Sam Olvier says:

      Adrian, it took the Palm Jumeirah and Burj Khalifa six years each to complete. Now we get 7 kiosks after 13 years. Do us a favour.

      We know Westfield are gonna half assed build this. They left a hole in the ground for many years in Nottingham Broadmarsh and sold on. Then Bradford similar story , a hole in the ground for many years then they finally built it , then dumped it.

      • It’s six kiosks, Sam. Just six.

        They couldn’t even offer a cheap rental deal to another of their Stratford or Shepherds Bush tenants to take the seventh kiosk.

        And meanwhile, they continue to treat long-standing tenants in the Whitgift Centre like shit.

  2. C says:

    As a parent from Yamaha music school, the team there have had a horrendous time with U.R.W before they are moving into a unit on keeley Road. Forcing regulations onto the small business that clearly haven’t been kept to in other units. Great handling of the situation by Bethany and Seamus though and it will be brilliant for the kids when they are eventually open..

    They do not seem to have the town’s interest in mind with these kiosks. Another convenience store? Who is buying flowers down there. Short sighted to say the least.

    • Sam Olvier says:

      “Who is buying flowers down there. Short sighted to say the least.”

      Nobody steals flowers and with Sky, Meltin’ Moments, Coco and Nut there is nothing really stealable either as you need to pay first to receive the product and service. I cant see anyone stealing Burquas too so Westfield might have played a blinder lol.

      With Miniso I can see that get looted to high heaven though. That may be a bad location

  3. So after all that this is it? Have a funny feeling it is is not going to be very successful at all. No wonder they have dillied and dallied with this project and it really is a case of the Emperor’s New Clothes. They would have been better off using the contractors suggested by Inside Croydon in the April Fools article. Footfall attracted would be far greater.

    • Remember, this is a “meanwhile use”, paid for out of fines levied on Westfield for previous non-delivery, and comes after the Mayor’s pet project, Secret Cinema, dumped on Perry by pulling out just weeks after the “big reveal”.

      • Sam Olvier says:

        PPP said there were “structural issues” when the the Lost project was abandoned. Not sure why they are installing kiosks in a structurally unsafe building all of a sudden. Unless Perry is full of shit ….

    • Nick Goy says:

      In the IC April Fools’ Day article, I still recall with a smile, ‘Kenley Fried Chicken’

  4. Jim Bush says:

    PPP ? Public Private Partnership vs. Croydon’s own Piss-Poor Perry? Perhaps some lawyers (the only ones who would benefit from such pointless legal action) should instigate a court case over who owns the acronym. It wouldn’t get Croydon’s town centre re-developed any faster, but it might provide a diversion for Croydon’s beleagured residents?

  5. Dave Smith says:

    What a shambles

Leave a Reply to insidecroydonCancel reply