Wednesday 15 September 2010

Reading Second in Clone Town UK List

A staggering 41% of UK towns are clone towns according to the widest ever Clone Town
survey results released today by leading independent think-tank nef (new
economics foundation).

There is a debate on Reading Forum about my town being second placed on the clone list here. This is linked to having 11 Tescos in town.
Clone Towns
Only 36 per cent of the high streets surveyed retain their distinctive character with more than two thirds of their shops being independents. The nef report, Re-imagining the High Street: Escape from Clone Town Britain, also brands the multiple chain outlets as "fair weather friends" who have either abandoned the high streets entirely or given up so-called secondary locations.

The report says that overall trend towards "Clone Town Britain", continues, despite widespread publicity about the loss of local identity following the 2005 Clone Town report.

Cambridge is the UK's most cloned town, managing only 11.6 on the diversity scale (out of a possible 100). Only nine varieties of shops are found on the main high street. Reading comes in at joint second place with 15.4. The huge number of Tescos has a lot to do with it

Paul Squires, the co-author of the report said: "The towns most dependent on the big chains and out of town stores have proven to be most vulnerable to the economic crisis. The government's "Big Society" idea cannot be built on these fractured local economies, represented so clearly by the empty shop fronts along our high streets."

"It's not all doom and gloom," Paul continued; "we found many towns that are thriving with initiatives to retain local diversity. The local currency schemes in Lewes and Brixton, for example; community buy-outs of post offices and pubs from Yorkshire to Cornwall; and loyalty cards for shopping at independent retailers from London to Penzance."

Elizabeth Cox, co-author of the report added: "We need to completely re-evaluate what we use our high streets for now that the age of mass retail is juddering to a halt. Our high streets could become places where shopping is just one small part of a rich mix of activities including working, sharing, exchanging, playing and learning new skills. As the hub of our communities, the high street could become the place where we begin to build a more sustainable world."

1 comment:

dazmando said...

Im not sure how Bracknell would rate. Our town centre is looking very tired. No clone shops want to locate here. Still we have some good local cafes in town