A popular garden centre in Reading has said that it will be closing by the end of this year. 

Dobbies Garden Centre, which is situated on Hyde End Road in Shinfield, will no longer be open to customers as the group has decided to close 17 stores. 

This will come as a great sadness to many who regularly use Dobbies for their gardening needs as well as the popular cafe that runs from the centre, which sees a great deal of customers weekly. 

The move, which is part of a wider restructuring, will see it shut 11 larger sites and six Little Dobbies stores.

It said that 465 of its roughly 3,600 workers will be affected by the planned closures.

The following stores are planned to close:

Larger stores

-Altrincham, Greater Manchester

-Antrim, Northern Ireland

-Gloucester, Gloucestershire

-Gosforth, Newcastle-upon-Tyne

-Harlestone Heath, Northamptonshire

-Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire

-Inverness, Scotland

-King’s Lynn, Norfolk

-Pennine, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire

-Reading, Berkshire

-Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire

Little Dobbies

-Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

-Chiswick, Greater London

-Clifton , Bristol

-Richmond, Greater London

-Stockbridge, Edinburgh, Scotland

-Westbourne Grove, Greater London

Dobbies Garden Centres said the proposed closures are part of a restructuring plan to help return the business to profit and reduce its rent bill.

The plan, which will need approval by creditors, will see the firm shut 11 larger Dobbies sites and six Little Dobbies by the end of the year.

Sites will continue to operate as normal until the restructuring process is given the green light.

The group said the closure will affect 465 workers, of which 82 are full-time, of the company’s roughly 3,600 strong workforce.

Dobbies will also work with landlords in order to secure temporary rent reductions at nine further stores.

It stressed that the process will not affect its suppliers.

The garden centre chain, which was bought by investment firm Ares Management last year, fell to a £105.2 million pre-tax loss in the year to March 2023, against a £7 million loss a year earlier, according to its most-recently filed company accounts.

The company said: “The restructuring plan, and other strategic initiatives, are expected to return Dobbies to sustainable profitability through site rationalisations, rent reductions and other tangible cost savings, securing its long-term future and allowing access to future investment.

“Thereafter, Dobbies will operate 60 stores and continue to play a key role in the market, working constructively with stakeholders and suppliers, and having an active and committed role in the communities in which it’s based.”