It is hard to remember now, but the Le Riches building was demolished and rebuilt as "Checkers", part of the Sandpiper group. They had a Waitrose franchise, and then eventually, the store was wholly taken over by the Waitrose chain.
Le Riches Stores Limited was one of Jersey’s most historic brands, dating back to a grocery shop opened in 1818. Over the generations, it grew to dominate local commerce, establishing supermarkets and department stores across the island, including prominent hubs like the Red Houses Department Store in St. Brelade.
In the 2000s, the parent company merged and evolved, eventually being acquired by SandpiperCI. Sandpiper maintained the Checkers superstores and used them to introduce UK-branded goods to islanders. For a couple of years, Sandpiper actually ran a supply agreement where Waitrose own-label products were sold on Checkers shelves.
This franchise trial paved the way for a permanent change. In 2010–2011, Sandpiper sold its entire large-supermarket division directly to the John Lewis Partnership. The final Checkers super-stores closed their doors for good in early 2011. The properties were completely refitted and opened as the Waitrose branches that islanders use today at Red Houses and Rue des Pres. Curiously there are still at least one Checkers store still open. And the checkered brick design is still present in the Red Houses underground car park.
The Upper Level: This floor was designed as a destination for services and leisure. It hosted the hairdresser, dentist, and a café where locals met for coffee. The toy department on this floor was a major attraction for local children, especially during the holidays.
We used to go there regularly with our young children, especially on rainy days, usually to enjoy coffee and tea cakes, while the kids had soft drinks and rusks, and later tea cakes. There is nothing like a buttered tea cake! Toys were an added occasional bonus if the children were good!
We also took our son Martin (who is autistic) to the hairdresser when they were not quite so busy as back then it was easier than a more noisy and longer waiting time at a barber. The hairdresser (Debbie?) later moved to Industria House ground floor (over the road at Red Houses).
The Ground Level: This floor focused on high-traffic retail. It featured a dedicated travel agent, a record department for music lovers, and the original food hall.
Back in the day, they also had their own brand carrier bags! I took some to University.