However, there is also a location in Portugal that is
featured on the list of the top 30 most expensive high-street retail locations
in the world.
According to the study 'Main Streets Across the World', by
Cushman & Wakefield, Chiado in Lisbon is 27th on the list.
According to Notícias ao Minuto, 5th Avenue thus regained first place in the ranking, after losing, in 2019, to Causeway Bay, in Hong
Kong.
"Currently, the emblematic avenue is the most expensive
high street retail location in the world, with an average annual income of
€21,076 per square metre".
"The indexation of the Hong Kong Dollar to the US
Dollar allowed Hong Kong to maintain its second position in the ranking, with
Tsim Sha Tsui practicing an average annual income of €15,134 per square meter,
replacing Causeway Bay as the territory's representative location", says
the consultant.
Thirdly, "the first European location appears at Via
Montapoleone, in Milan, with an average annual income of €14,547 per square
metre. It is the first time that this location has ranked first in Europe,
surpassing New Bond Street in London and the Champs Élysées in Paris".
Pricey Portugal
In Portugal, the most expensive location is Chiado, Lisbon, "which rose two positions in the ranking compared to 2019, now
ranking 27th worldwide".
"Prime rent on Rua Garret, a reference axis in Chiado,
has been registering a very significant increase since 2013, the year in which
high street retail in Portugal began to register strong growth - currently
standing at €1,426 per square metre, a value five times higher than that
recorded 30 years ago in the most expensive area of Lisbon".
Sandra Campos, director of the retail department at Cushman
& Wakefield Portugal, says, quoted in a statement, that "retail is
undoubtedly one of the most dynamic sectors in real estate"
"Directly impacted by good and bad events, it has been
responding with great insight to the most unusual challenges that the world has
been witnessing, capable of constantly reinventing and adapting, contradicting
claims that physical retail tends to assume a reduced role in the future".