Shop-Rite (Canada)

This article is about the Canadian catalogue store. For other uses, see ShopRite (disambiguation).
Shop-Rite
Genre Catalog showroom
Fate Bankruptcy
Founded Early 1970s
Defunct 1982
Headquarters Brampton, Ontario
Number of locations
65

Shop-Rite was a chain of catalogue stores in Ontario, Canada, that operated from the 1970s to 1982. In a Shop-Rite catalogue store, customers would browse the catalogue, select their merchandise and apply to the store clerk for the item.

The chain began with four stores in London, Ontario, in the early 1970s and was acquired in 1972 by Hudson's Bay Company (HBC)[1]when it purchased Middlesex Warehouse Sales Ltd., the operators of Shop-Rite catalogue stores. HBC, which operates The Bay department store chain and other retailers, expanded the chain to 60 stores within three years and built a large distribution centre in Brampton.[2]

In November 1981, the chain had 65 stores in Ontario when HBC announced that it would close the unprofitable chain on January 30, 1982.[2] Shop-Rite had been running annual losses of $3 million as a result of waning consumer interest.[2] It was expected that it would cost The Bay $8 million to close the chain, and that about 10 per cent of Shop-Rite's staff would be offered jobs in The Bay.[2] Wally Evans, president of The Bay at the time, said that in order to make the business viable, it would have to expand outside of Ontario, but that it did not have the money to do so.[2]

Shop-Rite was unable to compete with Consumers Distributing, which had over 400 catalogue stores in 1981 and sales of 40 per cent more per store than Shop-Rite.[2] Consumers closed in 1996.

Locations

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

See also

References

  1. HBC Heritage
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "600 to lose jobs as Bay closes Shop-Rite stores". The Ottawa Citizen. 1981-11-18. Retrieved 2011-11-22.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.