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Your Broadway just lost Clothes Café after 35 years. What's next?

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Your favourite clothing store on Broadway closed. What now?

Okay, so this is actually wild. You know Clothes Café, right? The place on Broadway Avenue, right by the Broadway Theatre, that's been there forever? Like, since 1989 forever? They just closed their doors after 35 years. Thirty-five years, my people! That's longer than some of us have been on this earth. It wasn't just a clothing store; they were pioneers in the Saskatoon skateboard scene too. This isn't just a shop closing; it's like a piece of the Broadway Bridge just decided to pack up and move.

### What This Means for Saskatoon

This isn't just about losing a place to buy cool clothes. It's about what it signals for our city's heart.

* **Broadway's Changing Face:** Broadway Avenue has always been that charming, slightly quirky strip where independent shops and local gems thrived. Clothes Café was a cornerstone of that vibe. When a long-standing institution like this goes, it makes you wonder about the future of that unique character we all love.

* **A Loss for Local Culture:** For many, Clothes Café was more than retail; it was a cultural hub, especially for those in the skate community. Losing spaces like this diminishes the fabric of what makes Saskatoon, well, Saskatoon.

* **The Big Picture:** Saskatoon is a city that will invite you to a farm-to-table dinner and then make you defend the concept of a city for twenty minutes. We talk a lot about supporting local, but then places like this, which have *been* local for decades, just… close. It makes you think about how we sustain these vital parts of our community.

It’s a real blow, especially when we're constantly trying to highlight the unique charm of our city, from the river trails to the fantastic food scene. Clothes Café was part of that charm. Saskatoon — seven bridges, two rivers, and something happening you haven't heard about yet. This time, it's a piece of our history slipping away.

My people on the morning show break this down properly. Catch them live at mornings.live.

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The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →