ABSTRACT
This paper describes an empirical case study of the Subiaco town centre in Western Australia. The research method employs geospatial mapping of archival and contemporary data sources to explore the town centre's changing spatial structure and high street morphology at the micro-scale over the past century. Once a thriving retail and business centre, Subiaco's (and possibly the state's), premier retail high street destination is now being compromised as the disruptive influence of online retailing gains further traction in the marketplace. Retail disruption provides the paper's conceptual foundation. Agents of disruption include the processes of creative destruction and innovation diffusion, which together with macro-economic factors help to explain the centre's evolution over time and space. The paper examines changes in the town centre's morphological character including residential gentrification, a growing dominance of fast food outlets, an overabundance of comparison stores and a more gendered offering in retail and personal services establishments. The paper also refers to the potential of the town centre to regain its past residential status as a means of fostering economic growth and renewal and suggests that this will only be achieved with radical intervention at the policy and planning level.
Acknowledgements
The author wishes to thank Associate Professor Paul Maginn and Professor Matthew Tonts for their reviews and considered inputs on earlier drafts of this article. Thanks are also extended to the anonymous referees for their constructive comments.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes on contributor
Dr Paul Drechsler is currently a Visiting Research Academic at the University of Western Australia. His research focus is on the retail sector and consumption environments and the impact of disruptive technologies on physical retail platforms. Prior to his current research position, Paul was Managing Director of a national architectural and planning practice and WA Planning Commissioner. Paul’s professional affiliations include Fellow of the Planning Institute of Australia and Fellow of the Australian Property Institute.