Sidney Myer's grandson urges retail giant to refurbish Bendigo store

As the Myer retail chain faces a major shake-up under businessman Solomon Lew, residents in the regional city where Myer was born have called on the company to give its original store some love.

Australia's first Myer department store opened in Bendigo's Pall Mall 125 years ago, in 1900, 11 years before the doors swung open at its flagship Melbourne Bourke Street base.


It was the launch pad for what has become one of Australia's most recognised brands, with 56 stores across the country.

But step inside the Bendigo Myer store and it is easy to see why rumours about its future are circling around town.

Peeling linoleum floors are patched up with duct tape, and plaster crumbles from the walls.


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The exterior walls of the Myer building on Pall Mall are flaking. (ABC Central Victoria: Emile Pavlich)


Bendigo Historical Society former president Jim Evans said residents had always been proud of Myer's presence in town, but the facade of the historic building was falling apart, and the interior had also seen better days.

"Bendigonians are appalled at the state of the building," Mr Evans said.

"It's an iconic building and it's certainly something that would attract attention from all over the world."

Jane Symonds, 74, has shopped at the Bendigo Myer store since the 1980s and said it used to be a mecca of high-end local retail.

"Everything needs to be refreshed … they need to refurbish it, make it brighter, newer," she said.

"We need a big, quality department store like that in Bendigo because we've got bugger all."

Myer grandson joins calls for revamp​

Sidney Myer's grandson Andrew Myer, who is also the chair of the philanthropic Sidney Myer Fund, believes the Bendigo building should be restored to its former glory rather than sit in disrepair.

"I think it is a cornerstone building," he told the ABC.

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The retailer evolved from being a drapery into a department store in Bendigo. (Supplied: Myer)


"As a passionate family member and knowing that it is the first store, I would love Myer, particularly the CEO [Olivia Wirth], to take some personal interest in the refurbishment of the store."

The philanthropist said the state of the Bendigo store was a matter for the board and management, and he believed other family members had raised the issue personally with the Myer Group.

The ABC understands the Bendigo store's elevator has recently been upgraded and plans are in place to replace the roof.


A Myer spokesperson acknowledged Mr Myer's feedback and said a review of all stores was underway.

"As this work progresses, we will have more to say on it, but there are no announcements in relation to Myer Bendigo at this stage," the spokesperson said.

"We have a constant program of maintenance works across our store network, which includes Myer Bendigo.


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Andrew Myer chairs the philanthropic Sidney Myer Fund. (ABC News: Richard Sydenham)


"Myer owns the Bendigo store and there are no changes to our operations."

Bendigo's Chamber of Commerce Be Bendigo chief executive Hayley Tibbett said she had contacted the Myer Bendigo manager, but had not received a response.

"We all [the Bendigo community] feel a passion for Myer," she said.

"Everybody will have some story about their connections to Myer and we would love it to actually reflect that in the premises itself."

Who was Sidney Myer?​

Sidney Myer, born Simcha Myer Baevski, was a Russian Jewish immigrant who arrived in Melbourne in 1899.

He opened a small drapery shop in Bendigo with his brother Elcon in 1900, which went on to become Myer and now extends to Hargreaves Mall.

The brothers prospered in central Victoria and opened another Myer store in Bendigo in 1908. In 1911, Sidney Myer bought a drapery store in Bourke Street, Melbourne, which is where the Myer Emporium flagship store still stands today.

The National Library of Australia holds newspaper records showing that in the 1930s at the height of the Great Depression, Mr Myer arranged to provide Christmas dinner for 10,000 people mostly from poorer families in Melbourne.

At the time, the Brisbane Courier reported that Mr Myer said he did not want the sense of charity to enter into the project, but rather for the people to feel like his personal guests to whom he wished to give a memorable Christmas.

The legacy of his philanthropy continues through the Sidney Myer Fund and The Myer Foundation.

By Emile Pavlich, Anna McGuinness and Sarah Lawrence
 

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Up until recently I thought Grace Bros and Myers were the same store just with a name change.

I then read how Grace bros was in NSW and opened maybe 10 years before Myers the Victorian base store.

Grace Bros was taken over by Myers in 1983 and rebranded in 2004.
 
I hope that the store is restored soon. We have lost so many of our old original department stores. Some of the old stores around Sydney for example have been repurposed like the old Mark Foys building, now a law court and the David Jones building on Market Street being developed as apartments. For nostalgia, having the iconic first Myer store brought back to life, helps keep a memory of where we have come from alive and preserves some of the past. The changing facing of shopping has taken away the relevance of the Department store and they are no longer what they used to be.
 
Wow! Benders has been mentioned twice in two weeks! I’ve got to say,this surprises me. I was born here many years ago and Myer has seen many changes and ups and downs. The most recent,about 12 months ago,there was talk of closing the store altogether owing to poor trading figures. So to hear they are thinking of upgrading is a shock. Bendigo central used to be a very busy hub but with major markets having been built further out of town and parking being more accessible,most folks are choosing to not come into town. It’s a shame because Bendigo is a truly beautiful heritage town with lots to offer and to see.
 
I was almost brought to tears when that beautiful Anthony Hordern's building was torn down. It was such a magnificent store with so much history and great service to those who lived in the country. Their catalogue was prised by country people who would go through it and see what they would/could buy for the next year.
 
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I was almost brought to tears when that beautiful Anthony Hordern's building was torn down. It was such a magnificent store with so much history and great service to those who lived in the country. Their catalogue was prised by country people who would go through it and see what they would/could buy for the next year.
I remember this huge blue building. Anthony Hordens closed down when I was a little boy so I really do not remember going there, but I have seen pictures of what it was like inside - the grandeur of the place in a different time. It is a shame it was torn down, it sat as an eye saw for many years and was used for many purposes and housed some of the UTS courses and TAFE. It sat for a while as a hole in the ground after it was pulled down, and made way for a huge development. It is not the same though, but that is progress.
 

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