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SpatialNews.com Press Release

Provincial Areas Score Over Large Conurbations when it Comes to Retail Coverage
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Berlin, Hamburg and Munich are the three dominant retail centers with the highest net retail purchasing power in Germany. However, the drawing power of retail trade in the smaller and mid-sized German towns in particular is often disproportionately strong when compared to their actual population. These are some of the findings of the GfK Retail Location Guide for Germany for 2008.

This year, Berlin, Hamburg, Munich and Stuttgart again feature at the top of the list of cities with the highest demand in their catchment areas. With retail purchasing power of just below 24 billion euros, Berlin ranks first, followed by Hamburg with 17.6 billion euros, which is just ahead of Munich at 17.2 billion euros. Some way down in fourth place with 15.2 billion euros retail purchasing power is another South German city: Stuttgart.

GfK Retail Purchasing Power in total Retail purchasing power volume (in billions of euros)

 

Retail purchasing power volume (in billions of euros)

Berlin
23.9
Hamburg
17.6
Munich
17.2
Stuttgart
15.2


However, the top ten German locations with the highest retail coverage relative to population reveal that it is often the smaller towns in more sparsely populated regions that attract proportionately more of their inhabitants as retail customers. The catchment or market area of a town includes all the surrounding communities whose inhabitants travel to the town in question for a significant portion of their retail purchases. Offenburg, Gießen and Bad Oeynhausen are good examples of this phenomenon.

For instance, Offenburg not only services the shopping needs of its just under 60,000 inhabitants, but is also the shopping destination of choice for residents of the Black Forest as well as some communities in neighboring France, including the Strasbourg region. This means that the number of potential customers of the catchment area is around 13 times higher than the actual number of people living in the town. The same applies to Gießen, which, despite being a relatively small town, functions as a retail hub for the otherwise relatively sparsely populated region of central Hesse. This goes to show that the size of a town says little about its actual importance as a retail location.

Ranking Community
Population of community
Population of catchment area
Coverage coefficient *
1
Offenburg
58,811
767,933
13.1
2
Gießen
73,958
870,405
11.8
3
Bad Oeynhausen
49,194
551,126
11.2
4
Passau
50,644
500,836
9.9
5
Koblenz
105,888
981,436
9.3
6
Siegburg
39,192
334,614
8.5
7
Limburg/ Lahn
33,832
279,803
8.3
8
Würzburg
134,913
1,074,996
8.0
9
Schweinfurt
53,970
428,484
7.9
10
Ulm
120,925
907,291
7.5


The survey
For its annual publication, GfK Retail Location Guide Germany, GfK GeoMarketing defines the catchment areas of more than 450 urban retail locations with 20,000 inhabitants or more and analyzes the retail-relevant purchasing power for these regions. The study also provides a breakdown of retail purchasing power for twelve product groups. The survey thus indicates the available market potential for the retail trade and project developers in the catchment areas of the relevant towns and economic centers across Germany. In addition, market indices such as “GfK Retail Sales” and “GfK Retail Centrality” provide performance data on the local retail trade.

About GfK GeoMarketing
GfK GeoMarketing is one of Europe’s largest providers of geomarketing solutions for customers from all branches of trade. Its services include:

Consultancy and reports
Market Data
Digital Maps
RegioGraph and DISTRICT geomarketing software solutions
The company is a subsidiary of the international GfK network. Ranked among the world’s top 5 market research organizations, the GfK Group consists of 115 subsidiaries and more than 9,000 employees, with operations in 100 countries.

More information on GfK GeoMarketing:
www.gfk-geomarketing.com




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