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Saks Fifth Avenue at New Orleans’ Canal Place since the 1980s, to close for good
Posted on 2/10/26 at 6:57 pm
Posted on 2/10/26 at 6:57 pm
This is a pretty significant blow to Canal Street and to shopping in the New Orleans area at large. We will no longer have any upscale department store in the Gulf South.
The bigger issue is there is no question that most of the retail stores in Canal Place have co-tenancy clauses in their leases. This will allow them to terminate their leases the second that Saks closes its doors. The closest upscale department store will be in Houston or Atlanta.
NOLA
Saks Global, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last month, announced Tuesday that it will close eight Saks Fifth Avenue stores and one Neiman Marcus around the country.
The Canal Place store will remain open until the end of April, according to a statement from a company spokesperson.
“As part of Saks Global’s ongoing evaluation of its physical footprint, we have made the decision to close select Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus locations, including the Saks Fifth Avenue New Orleans location, based on a number of factors, including performance and lease economics," it said.
The announcement is a blow to retail on Canal Street, New Orleans' historic shopping corridor that has gradually seen the departure of department stores and high end retailers over the past several decades. In November, Adler's announced it is closing its luxury jewelry store down the street from Saks after more than 120 years in business.
Four of the stores slated for closure are in markets that already have another store owned by Saks Global, also the parent company of Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman.
Other Saks Global locations set to close this spring include Birmingham, Alabama; Columbus, Ohio; Richmond, Virginia; Tulsa, Oklahoma; East Rutherford, New Jersey; Philadelphia; and Phoenix, the later three of which have other Saks or Neiman stores.
The bigger issue is there is no question that most of the retail stores in Canal Place have co-tenancy clauses in their leases. This will allow them to terminate their leases the second that Saks closes its doors. The closest upscale department store will be in Houston or Atlanta.
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here. NOLA
Saks Global, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last month, announced Tuesday that it will close eight Saks Fifth Avenue stores and one Neiman Marcus around the country.
The Canal Place store will remain open until the end of April, according to a statement from a company spokesperson.
“As part of Saks Global’s ongoing evaluation of its physical footprint, we have made the decision to close select Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus locations, including the Saks Fifth Avenue New Orleans location, based on a number of factors, including performance and lease economics," it said.
The announcement is a blow to retail on Canal Street, New Orleans' historic shopping corridor that has gradually seen the departure of department stores and high end retailers over the past several decades. In November, Adler's announced it is closing its luxury jewelry store down the street from Saks after more than 120 years in business.
Four of the stores slated for closure are in markets that already have another store owned by Saks Global, also the parent company of Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman.
Other Saks Global locations set to close this spring include Birmingham, Alabama; Columbus, Ohio; Richmond, Virginia; Tulsa, Oklahoma; East Rutherford, New Jersey; Philadelphia; and Phoenix, the later three of which have other Saks or Neiman stores.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:00 pm to MrLSU
Where will the homos shop now?
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:00 pm to MrLSU
Oh well. Where will we buy our unnecessary overpriced crap? Some how some way I’ll survive
This post was edited on 2/10/26 at 7:02 pm
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:00 pm to MrLSU
When that USAID money dries up, so do the grifters. Teddy is gonna be spotted at WalMart before this is all over.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:01 pm to MrLSU
Not surprising. NOLA is not headed in a good direction. Maybe this new mayor can help save it a little bit but NOLA really need conservatives to take over.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:05 pm to MrLSU
my friend and I used to laugh so much at that stores name whenever our parents brought us down to canal street. We were 13 and it's still funny.
his mom always talked about Mignon Faget and shopping at Saks and wed die laughing
his mom always talked about Mignon Faget and shopping at Saks and wed die laughing
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:06 pm to MrLSU
Enjoy your new Spirit Halloween store New Orleans. They’re leaving undoubtedly due to the decay of the city and the massive losses they’re incurring from thieves. The filth and trash that inhabit that city are why they’ll never again have nice things. I love New Orleans, but despise 80% of the population, which is why my family and I will avoid that city at all cost. Crooked piece of shite mayors, DEI police that refuse to clean up the steets, quickly deteriorating infrastructure…while the money that could be used to fix the city is used to line the pockets of the over 5,000 over-paid and under-skilled city employees.
This post was edited on 2/10/26 at 7:08 pm
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:11 pm to salty1
I'm curious to see how much business has fallen off at this location. A few years ago the store was achieving around $500 in sales per square foot so it will be interesting to see how this number collapsed and in what year it collapsed in the BK proceedings.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:17 pm to MrLSU
Sala is undergoing a reorganization under bankruptcy protection I am not sure they will survive it. They will be down to 25 stores nationally after this round of closures. They may not exist in 2 years
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:23 pm to MrLSU
It’s a shame to see. New Orleans once featured numerous local high end stores. Luxury department stores are struggling, with fewer chains left, and Saks is on the ropes.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:44 pm to GetBackToWork
quote:
It’s a shame to see. New Orleans once featured numerous local high end stores. Luxury department stores are struggling, with fewer chains left, and Saks is on the ropes.
Who really shops in brick and mortar stores for dry goods, anyway? If people see it on the internet, they search the internet to buy it.
When I'm in stores, I look over products I like, then I scan the barcode into Amazon to see if I can get it cheaper delivered to me.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:50 pm to SelaTiger
quote:Where will the [REDACTED] shoplift now?
Where will the homos shop now?
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:51 pm to Btrtigerfan
With the internet and online shopping, you are going to see a lot of this across the country. I think Saks, or Neiman Marcus, or some other big-name high-end retailer filed for some kind of bankruptcy protection near the end of last year. It's sad because I still like to try something on before buying but with no cost returns on mail-order why keep the overhead of the big box.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:56 pm to MrLSU
In 2026, it seems like a lot of department stores could operate out of much smaller stores.
If I were a CEO of a huge retail store, I would have big locations in maybe 6 or 7 cities around the country.
NY
LA
LV
HOU
TB
ATL
Then I would have much smaller stores that would carry the items that are sold the most, but serve more as an "online outlet". If people buy something online and want to return it they can go to the "online outlet", if they want to try on certain things first, etc
By doing this you could put up more of these stores than the bigger department stores because it would be much cheaper, which allows you to market to more people.
If I were a CEO of a huge retail store, I would have big locations in maybe 6 or 7 cities around the country.
NY
LA
LV
HOU
TB
ATL
Then I would have much smaller stores that would carry the items that are sold the most, but serve more as an "online outlet". If people buy something online and want to return it they can go to the "online outlet", if they want to try on certain things first, etc
By doing this you could put up more of these stores than the bigger department stores because it would be much cheaper, which allows you to market to more people.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:57 pm to Btrtigerfan
quote:but you are already in the store
When I'm in stores
I mean, if it’s a big price difference, then sure
But you are already there
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:58 pm to MrLSU
shite, I didn’t realize it was even still open
Posted on 2/10/26 at 7:59 pm to danilo
quote:
Oh well. Where will we buy our unnecessary overpriced crap? Some how some way I’ll survive
Oh ok. danilo can’t afford to shop there so this news is fine. Any business that danilo doesn’t personally use can shut down and leave, the city will be fine
Posted on 2/10/26 at 8:07 pm to salty1
quote:
They’re leaving undoubtedly due to the decay of the city
it says right in the article the company is bankrupt and closing 8 stores
Posted on 2/10/26 at 8:14 pm to MrLSU
Brian Kelly has lost control of Canal Street.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 8:45 pm to PelicanState87
quote:
Not surprising. NOLA is not headed in a good direction. Maybe this new mayor can help save it a little bit but NOLA really need conservatives to take over
Whether NOLA is trending up or down is irrelevant here. This is an indictment more on retail shopping than NOLA.
What you have is a company, Global Brands, who tripled down on three luxury department stores:
Saks
Neiman Marcus
Bergdorf Goodman
All while brick and mortar shopping is down. People don’t need the extras that upscale department stores offer anymore. The personal shopper has been made almost useless with the internet and social media now. You have direct links to the things being advertised to you before the reel is over. You don’t need someone in a store to introduce you to an item anymore.
It is a shame because there is something about going to a nice store and being given personal attention by someone who knows what they are doing but it is obsolete now unfortunately.
Anyway, Sac’s on Burnside is still going strong
This post was edited on 2/10/26 at 8:46 pm
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