Aberdeen Retail 1 Limited and Aberdeen Retail 2 Limited, the Guernsey-based owners and operators of the Bon Accord shopping centre in the centre of Aberdeen, have been placed in administration.

James Fennessey, Blair Milne, Colin Haig and Matthew Richards, partners with leading accountancy firm Azets, have been appointed joint administrators of both companies.

It remains ‘business as usual’ for the mall whilst the joint administrators implement a strategy to ensure that the operating companies can continue to trade and whilst the centre and its assets are prepared for sale.

The average annual footfall to the Bon Accord Shopping Centre pre-CV19 was 15 million visitors.

The administration has been caused by unsustainable cash flow problems stemming from the on-going impact of the CV19 pandemic, rising operational costs and intense retail competition.

'Significant contribution'

James Fennessey, Restructuring Partner with Azets said: “The Bon Accord Shopping Centre and the St Nicholas Centre, which merged with the Bon Accord in 2020, are long-established and retail centres with a very strong brand name and awareness across the North of Scotland.

"They have consistently attracted and retained a wide range of quality retail tenants over the years, and regularly draw hundreds of thousands of visitors every year.

"The contribution of the Bon Accord to the economy of the North-East is significant and the centre is as much a social hub and focal point for the city as it is a retail centre. We will now quickly stabilise the trading position and wish to reassure tenants, shoppers and stakeholders that it is very much business as usual.

“Interested parties are asked to contact the selling agents, Cushman & Wakefield, as soon as possible as we are keen to try and find a buyer promptly.”

'Use it or lose it' warning

Ryan Crighton, Policy Director at Aberdeen & Grampian Chamber of Commerce, said swift action was needed from government to arrest the decline in Scotland's high streets.

“Clearly, this is a concerning development, he said.

"However, there is precedent with other centres in the UK trading through administration for extended periods, which offers hope.

“The Bon Accord Centre has been at the heart of Aberdeen’s retail offering for over 30 years – and that must continue. However, if people want a vibrant city centre, this should serve as a clear ‘use it or lose it’ warning.

“After years of regressive policies which have starved our high streets of footfall, we now need innovative solutions to get people back into our city centres to live, work and play."

Diverse tenants

The Bon Accord Shopping Centre, which was built in 1990, extends to two main buildings on George Street and Union Street.

It features 460,000 sq ft of retail space with 72 retail units over three floors and 1400 car parking spaces in two owner-operated car parks to the north and south sides of the centre.

Additional period buildings on George Street, Upper Kirkgate, Loch Street and Gallowgate provide a further 90,000sq ft of retail and ancillary space, 6,300sq ft of offices, residential units, and the listed Students Union building.

A diverse range of retail, hospitality and business tenants are based in the Bon Accord Shopping Centre and include a wide range of national high street retailers, specialist shops, restaurants, café's and administrative businesses.

The joint administrators are encouraging interested parties to make contact as soon as possible and have appointed specialist commercial property agents Cushman & Wakefield to prepare sales particulars and manage the sales process.

All centre management employees are being retained following the appointment of the administrators.

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