Savile Row: Tailors fear for future if proposed
developments go ahead
By Jay
Gardner
BBC London
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-london-62876131
Published
7 hours ago
/ 20-9-2022
Some tailors on the famous street feel the area will
"lose its sense of identity"
Tailors
along London's famous Savile Row are concerned proposed developments could mean
the area "loses its sense of identity" and potentially put them out
of business altogether.
Some of the
bespoke suit makers fear their stores will be replaced with office space,
restaurants and ready-to-wear shops.
The Pollen
Estate, which owns most of the real estate on the iconic street, has submitted
plans to create spaces which will not be used by tailors.
Joseph
Morgan, manager at Chittleborough and Morgan said: "The tragedy is that
Savile Row will be like any other street in the world."
Mr Morgan
who has been a tailor on Savile Row since 1969 and dressed the likes of Elton
John, Mick and Bianca Jagger, feared it was "losing its sense of
identity".
Joseph Morgan fears Savile Row will be "like any
other street in the world"
Mr Morgan
said he worried Savile Row could lose its bespoke roots and move towards a
street of stores selling ready-to wear-clothing.
"In
the UK, all the streets are similar, you can buy ready-to-wear anywhere. But
you can only get bespoke in London - let's bring back industry," he added.
"It
(Savile Row) needs the individual the identity of the bespoke industry, we need
the City of Westminster Council to stand up."
One
particular development of concern is the revamp of Heathcote House, which if
given council permission, would be turned into a retail space and art gallery,
according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS).
The
company's website http://www.thepollenestate.com/east-mayfair/savile-row
said it would "work to ensure that the
non-tailoring retail uses in Savile Row are supportive of tailoring and the
success of the street", but some felt that this would not be the case.
James
Cottrell, owner of Welsh and Jeffries, was recently forced to close his store
due to high rents and the Covid-19 pandemic. The store remains unoccupied.
"The
landlord wants us tailors out," Mr Cottrell said.
"It
will become an eatery area. We built Savile Row and they will kill it. They
(landlords) will do what they can to generate the most rent."
Quan
Yingmei has worked in Savile Row since 2003, including a period alongside Mr
Cottrell.
"We
were quite upset by that (the development plans)," said Miss Quan.
Quan
Yingmei believes both local and national government need to intervene to save
Savile Row's tailors
She added
that Welsh and Jeffries' attempts at moving to a new store on the street were
"rejected because we are tailors".
"We
made Savile Row famous, not them. We really need protection from the government
because this is history," she concluded.
But not all
of the stores along the famous street share the view that development will
destroy its heritage.
Christopher
Boadle, founder of footwear company Arthur Sleep, based on Savile Row, believes
developments could help drive new audiences to the area, particularly younger
customers with quicker manufacturing processes.
"Arthur
Sleep likes to think of itself as the new vision of the Pollen Estates
movement, into bringing further relevance to Savile Row," he told BBC
London.
"The
more people that can come here and spend time on the street the better,
visiting all the incredible tailors."
Despite
welcoming change along the street, Mr Boadle insists that developments must
support tailors.
"They
are the cornerstones of the street," he added.
"I
want to support and maintain them as much as we can. Arthur Sleep is here to
bring a new vision and a fresh perspective.
"And
that can only support everything the very traditionalists are here to cater
for. Ultimately that is why people want to come to Savile Row, to come and
experience the craftmanship, which Britain does best."
Daisy
Knatchbull, founder of The Deck, the first womenswear store on Savile Row,
agrees change is acceptable as long as history is respected.
She said:
"Change is inevitable but needs to be in line with the street's history
and respects the tailors.
"It is
the duty of Savile Row, keeping the history and heritage, and that's the job of
the landlord."
Store owners say they have vacated due to increased
rent and business rates
Pollen Estate maintains that tailor stores remains the
focus of their development of the street.
In a
statement to the LDRS, it said tailors such as Edward Sexton are moving on to
the street as well as new bespoke stores, selling streetwear and womenswear.
The
statement read: "Savile Row's tailoring and craftsmanship heritage remain
at the core of The Pollen Estate's vision for the street, with several recent
arrivals to the Row as well as further announcements coming this year."
A
spokesperson for City of Westminster Council said: "We do not comment on
individual applications, however Savile Row has been the home of bespoke
tailoring for nearly 200 years and we have policies in place to protect its
unique character."
No comments:
Post a Comment