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Selfridges wins approval for private members' club

Selfridges wins approval for private members' club

Fashion Network6 hours ago

Selfridges, the department store chain owned by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Thailand's Central Group, won approval for a new private members' club at its flagship London outlet.
Westminster City Council approved an application to convert space currently used for staff offices into a membership venue with a terrace and private dining room. The proposal is part of a wider plan to launch a new 'exclusive new shopping and social destination for its most valued customers and members' on Duke Street in the spring, according to a filing.
London has seen a surge in high-end membership-only venues as affluent residents seek exclusive spaces, especially as flexible working has blurred the lines between professional and personal life. These venues have also become a strategy for real estate owners to generate more revenue from underutilized spaces.
Tuesday's council approval grants the owners the right to use the space as a members' club or for retail purposes for a period of 50 years, the filings show. The space is part of the SWOD building, which was built in the 1930s as an extension to the main classical building that faces Oxford Street, one of Europe's busiest shopping thoroughfares.
Saudi Arabia's PIF became a minority owner in privately held Selfridges last year after acquiring a 40% stake that had been owned by the Signa Group, the now-defunct real estate empire founded by Austrian Rene Benko.
The story of the store's founding in 1909 by US retailer Harry Gordon Selfridge was later adapted into the Mr Selfridge TV series starring Jeremy Piven. The roof gardens, which hosted fashion shows and crazy golf in the years after the opening, were destroyed in the Blitz in 1940. They remained closed for about 70 years before reopening in 2009 for an exclusive pop-up restaurant run by French chef Pierre Koffmann, according to one of the filings for the planning approval.

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Selfridges wins approval for private members' club
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Fashion Network

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Selfridges wins approval for private members' club

Selfridges, the department store chain owned by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Thailand's Central Group, won approval for a new private members' club at its flagship London outlet. Westminster City Council approved an application to convert space currently used for staff offices into a membership venue with a terrace and private dining room. The proposal is part of a wider plan to launch a new 'exclusive new shopping and social destination for its most valued customers and members' on Duke Street in the spring, according to a filing. London has seen a surge in high-end membership-only venues as affluent residents seek exclusive spaces, especially as flexible working has blurred the lines between professional and personal life. These venues have also become a strategy for real estate owners to generate more revenue from underutilized spaces. Tuesday's council approval grants the owners the right to use the space as a members' club or for retail purposes for a period of 50 years, the filings show. The space is part of the SWOD building, which was built in the 1930s as an extension to the main classical building that faces Oxford Street, one of Europe's busiest shopping thoroughfares. Saudi Arabia's PIF became a minority owner in privately held Selfridges last year after acquiring a 40% stake that had been owned by the Signa Group, the now-defunct real estate empire founded by Austrian Rene Benko. The story of the store's founding in 1909 by US retailer Harry Gordon Selfridge was later adapted into the Mr Selfridge TV series starring Jeremy Piven. The roof gardens, which hosted fashion shows and crazy golf in the years after the opening, were destroyed in the Blitz in 1940. They remained closed for about 70 years before reopening in 2009 for an exclusive pop-up restaurant run by French chef Pierre Koffmann, according to one of the filings for the planning approval.

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