25-07-2025
- Business
- Belfast Telegraph
NI menswear brand opening new store in city centre
Remus Uomo, which is part of the Carrickfergus-based Douglas & Grahame business, is planning to convert the Jack Wills store on Arthur Street into a new retail spot for the brand.
It could see the B1 listed building refurbished as well as ground floor retail unit partly being turned into a café space.
'The proposed works consist of internal refurbishment to the existing unit; including the partial removal of existing partition walls and construction of new [walls].
'[It also include] partial removal of an existing non-original partition with archways at ground floor level to be made wider and create a more open space.'
Adam Finlay is managing director of the Northern Ireland family-run menswear company Douglas & Grahame, which is behind the Remus Uomo brand.
There are three standalone Remus Uomo shops in Dublin off St Stephen's Green, as well as Glasgow and Belfast's Victoria Square.
The brand Remus Uomo was thought up by Mr Finlay's father Donald and uncle Richard, the second generation of Finlays in the business, as they travelled between Pisa and Florence in 1991 on a fabric-sourcing trip.
Remus Uomo and sister brands Daniel Grahame, DG's Drifter and 1880 CLUB are stocked in independent men's retailers and department stores on both sides of the border.
Speaking to the Belfast Telegraph last year, Mr Finlay said: 'Our product is so much about fit and form and about the tactility of the fabrications we use.'
He also said expansion was on the cards for the business, which marked its centenary last year.
'The most particular target for us would be strategic locations in Great Britain.
'We're very conscious to be respectful to our existing independent retailers, where for example on the island of Ireland we're extremely well-served by that part of the industry.
'But in mainland Great Britain, we've always found it that bit more difficult. There's not that same spread of the independent retailers and so we have great swathes of the mainland where we don't have any significant business at all.'
Its ambitions are to set up stores in cities like Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield and Edinburgh.