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Department store quitting shopping arcade a sign of the times in central Japan

  • The Takashimaya store in a shopping arcade in Gifu city shuts in July. Shop owners there vow to revive it by attracting a younger clientele

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The Yanagase shopping arcade in Gifu, Japan, has been in decline for some years, and now its department store is to close. Shop owners there are determined to attract a younger clientele. Photo: Douggers/Wikipedia
Kyodo

A once-bustling shopping district in the city of Gifu in central Japan will see the closure of department store Takashimaya at the end of July. The Yanagase district has a 135-year history and was even the inspiration for a hit song.

Takashimaya’s departure from Yanagase shopping arcade is a portent of a worrying trend sweeping Japan: commercial districts with major department stores are seeing a downturn in customers. This is in part because of the country’s declining birth rate and ageing population.

Despite the setback, individual store owners in the Yanagase arcade are determined to turn their fortunes around by using social media to remind people of the area’s historical charm while trying to attract a younger, more vibrant clientele.

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“I’ve always come to Yanagase because Takashimaya was here. If the store closes, it will be gloomy all around,” says part-time building cleaner Akira Hayashi, 77, on one weekday afternoon in May while standing in the sparsely populated street of closed storefronts.

Hayashi fondly recalls his days of drinking at thriving taverns along the shopping street as a young man.

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