In 1970, when Greg Sager and Bob Coltart first opened their furniture store, the area around upper Government Street north of Chinatown was a bit of no-man鈥檚 land of empty lots, vacant buildings, a butcher and automotive garages.
鈥淧eople were scared to walk down here,鈥 said Sager. 鈥淐apital Iron was the only other retailer.鈥
That initially left the partners wondering if a furniture store was actually going to work. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think we鈥檇 be there a year,鈥 Sager said.
Well, it worked. And quite well.
In fact, Victoria鈥檚 Design District was built around what Sager and Coltart started with their store. Designers, architects and other home accent and furnishing retailers started flocking in, making way for a rebirth of the forgotten far end of downtown.
鈥淭he Design District is a nice little legacy for us,鈥 Sager said in an interview as the store started to wind down its 50-plus years at 1802 Government St.
鈥淲e were alone and gradually others started to come. As a store, we just started expanding, knocking out walls to 颅create larger spaces. We were 颅fortunate to create great relationships with customers who kept coming back.鈥
Sager, 71, and brother-in-law Coltart, 79, are heading into retirement and passing the torch to a third generation, Scott 颅Coltart, son of Sager鈥檚 partner.
The Sager鈥檚 store is closing for good 鈥 the fate of the property undisclosed at this point 鈥 and Scott Coltart is restarting the brand with an emphasis on sleeper beds and other furnishings at Sager鈥檚 showroom and warehouse property at 2809 Quesnel St.
Greg Sager鈥檚 and Bob 颅Coltart鈥檚 store was originally a satellite of the Sager鈥檚 seven-store chain, founded by Sager鈥檚 father Henry and brother Mel in 1956 in 颅Vancouver and Calgary.
Six of the other stores closed as family members retired, but the Victoria location endured.
Sager said the key to longevity was hiring good staff, making sure customers were happy, spotting design trends early and resisting the cheaper brands for higher quality lines sourced from Europe, sa国际传媒 and the United States.
That enabled the company to weather the onslaught from big-box retailers and many other competitors who have come and gone over the years.
鈥淲e鈥檝e really seen it all over the past 50 years,鈥 said Sager. 鈥淲e started selling maple colonial, then finer furniture, the arts-and-crafts movement leather 鈥 we just kept moving with the trends,鈥 said Sager.
鈥淣ow the trend is for smaller living spaces.鈥
The rapidly changing 颅marketplace was writing on the wall for Coltart and Sager, who were more than ready to retire.
鈥淗ave you been to a Tesla dealership? Nowadays you don鈥檛 need a big showroom. You can just have a car in there and a big screen for people to pick fabrics and colours,鈥 he said. It鈥檚 the modern way of retailing now.鈥
Sager is selling all of its downtown stock in a closeout sale, hoping to empty the space by the end of April.
The company is assuring 颅customers that all outstanding custom orders will be fulfilled and delivered from Sager鈥檚 Quesnel Street warehouse.