CORN EXCHANGE GIVES COUPLE CHANCE TO COME HOME

A gourmet couple who left Crickhowell because they couldn’t find a permanent place to trade from are “coming home” after being offered a new shop in the converted Corn Exchange pub.

Darryl Evans and Michelle O’Donnell-Evans started selling their luxury brownies from Crickhowell’s Market Hall in 2013.  Their home-baking enterprise proved a huge success and they started looking for a shop to trade from but they couldn’t find a suitable premise.

Michelle said: “We love Crickhowell and desperately wanted to stay.  We explored every nook and cranny but couldn’t find anywhere feasible in the town centre to trade from.  In the end we made the difficult decision to set up elsewhere, away from our family and friends.  It was hard but we’ve visited regularly and always said we would come back if we could.  When we heard about The Corn Exchange we knew this was our chance and wanted to be part of this really special project.”

Darryl and Michelle were prominent members of Crickhowell’s Totally Locally movement and helped promote Crickhowell’s uniquely independent High Street before they left.  Now they are bringing their range of luxury brownies back to Crickhowell, along with several specially selected gourmet coffees and teas. In January 2018, they will launch their vegetarian and vegan brunch-style menu.  And the shop will also showcase their increasingly popular brownie wedding cakes, brownie towers and brownie wedding favours.

Darryl said: “Our brownies were very popular in Crickhowell and many people have kept in contact with us since we were here.  Since the chocolate shop left town, we feel there is a gap in the market for luxury sweet goods and a growing desire for vegetarian and vegan cuisine.”

The couple also want to turn Odonnell Bakehouse into a hub for the thriving arts community in the area.  Darryl said: “Crickhowell is a very special place and we want to help the town to flourish.  In time, we want to do themed tastings with seasonal foods, using the fantastic local produce that is available, and hold events to give up and coming artists and musicians a venue where they can be viewed, heard and enjoyed by as many people as possible in Crickhowell and the surrounding areas”.

Darryl and Michelle will take the largest unit in The Corn Exchange, which is now owned by 250 mainly local shareholders.  Managing Director of Corn Exchange Crickhowell Ltd, Dean Christy, said: “We are delighted to welcome Odonnell Bakehouse back home to Crickhowell.  Their brownies were immensely popular when they traded from the Market Hall and it is a measure of their success that they now want a shop to trade from.

“The conversion of The Corn Exchange has created new retail spaces and new opportunities for great small businesses like theirs and they, in turn, are planning to offer a platform for up and coming artists and artisans to display all that is best about Crickhowell.”

 

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FIRST SHOP TENANTS NAMED

WALES’ FIRST “ZERO WASTE” SHOP TO OPEN IN FORMER CRICKHOWELL PUB

Wales’ first “Zero Waste” shop – selling food without plastic packaging – is to open in a former Crickhowell High Street pub which was once under threat of being turned into a conventional supermarket.

The new proprietors say the new shop will be called “Natural Weigh” and will sell organic, additive-free products by weight, with customers serving themselves from hoppers. Consumers can bring their own re-usable containers, weigh them, then select from a range of mainly dried foods before weighing the full containers again to see how much they are buying. Customers who haven’t brought their own containers will be offered compostable or reusable alternatives to purchase.

Chloe Masefield – who will be running the shop with her husband, Robin – said: “The throw-away consumer culture means that a growing number of unwanted plastic items are discarded into our seas every year, posing a threat to people and wildlife. Despite growing demand for a reduction in plastic packaging, consumers do not often have the opportunity to reduce their plastic packaging consumption. Our shop will offer customers the chance to exercise their rights and allow them to choose an alternative. We will offer food free from packaging waste, enabling customers to re-use containers again and again to collect their consumables.”

The couple are hoping that other High Street traders – many of whom already offer paper or compostable bags as an alternative to plastic – will join them and further reduce plastic waste in the town.  Robin Masefield said: “We aim to give residents of Crickhowell and beyond the chance to do almost their entire household shopping without the need for disposable packaging and eventually reduce the amount of household refuse by over 50% for our customers.”

The former Corn Exchange pub in Crickhowell was under threat of being turned into a conventional supermarket in 2015 but local residents protested and the application was withdrawn.  Since then, 250 mainly local shareholders have clubbed together to buy the building and convert it into three flats and three shops – one of which will be occupied by Natural Weigh.

Corn Exchange Crickhowell Ltd Managing Director, Dean Christy, said:” We are thrilled that Rob and Chloe want to open up Wales’ first Zero Waste store in The Corn Exchange.  We stopped a conventional supermarket because it would have threatened our town.  Now, The Corn Exchange will help to protect not just our unique High Street and the independent shops within it but also the countryside around it and the world in which we live”.

Zero waste shopping is popular in EU countries and the United States but has only recently caught on in the UK.  Totnes in Devon, a similarly independent town, has one.

Gill Bell, the Marine Conservation Society’s Head of Conservation Wales, said: “We’re really excited that Wales is to get its first zero waste shop in Crickhowell. The overuse of plastic packaging and single use plastics generally is spiralling out of control. But we know that people are happy to use less plastic – the success of the 5p carrier bag charge in Wales is testament to that. We would urge people to try and shop ‘zero waste’ and take those good habits to their local supermarkets and refuse to buy items that are over packaged. Having supported the MCS Plastic Challenge for four years and trying to live plastic free for a whole month, I know how hard it is to source plastic free stuff so I’m thrilled to see what Chloe and Robin are doing. Let us hope that it inspires more shops to go down this route.”

Natural Weigh will now be fitted out with new dispensing hoppers and it is hoped it will be fully open in March 2018.

 

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VIDEO OF THE FLATS

The Corn Exchange flats in Crickhowell are nearly ready. Email info@cornexchangecrickhowell.co.uk #flatforrent #rentinG

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ONE UNIT LEFT IN THE CORN EXCHANGE

We have one prime retail space left available for rent in the new Corn Exchange complex on Crickhowell’s bustling High Street. The unit has 37 sq metres of shop floor and will be newly refurbished with a display window directly on to The High Street. Available from November. You’ll be one of three new shops with exciting new neighbours who are going to make a buzz in the town and beyond. We are prepared to negotiate on the rent for the right business. All inquiries by email to info@cornexchangecrickhowell.co.uk

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UPDATE ON THE RETAIL UNITS

UPDATE ON THE RETAIL UNITS

We are delighted to say that we are now in detailed discussions with independent retailers about two of the three shop units in The Corn Exchange.

These businesses want to bring new and original shopping experiences to Crickhowell. We can’t give all the details now but we can say that what they offer has significant differences from other businesses in the town.

Managing Director, Dean Christy, said: “One of our potential tenants is offering a shopping experience which has never been seen in Crickhowell, probably in Wales. It is a very exciting idea which will help put the town on the map and cement its reputation for original and interesting shops.”

“The other business aims to engage with the growing artistic community in Crickhowell and become a hub for creative thinkers. It also has other strands from artisan products to locally sourced goods and services.” he said.

The Corn Exchange Crickhowell Ltd board considered seven applications following a successful Open Weekend during which we showed off the nearly completed shops. We hope to be able to make announcements about the two shops within days.

We are still considering applications for the third unit but we have not yet reached a decision because we want to see who else comes forward as the building comes even closer to completion.

CECLtd Communications Director, Tim Jones, said:” In all, we have spoken to more than 60 people about the shops and the fact that we are only now making decisions demonstrates how careful we are being about the tenants we choose. Our shareholders have laid out a clear tenancy policy for us and we are following it. We think we have found the right people to go into two of the shops – which leaves a single window of opportunity for someone else to come forward, quickly, before we make a decision on the third.”

We also hope that, once the shops and flats are let investors will want to celebrate the success of The Corn Exchange project and buy the remaining shares which are on offer.

Finance Director, Peter Roberts, said: “The last Open Days showed people how close we are to finishing the conversion of The Corn Exchange and how attractive the shops and flats will be. That brought in over £10,000 of new investment but there are still shares to sell. Whoever buys them will become part of what is shaping up to be a phenomenal success for Crickhowell.

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DIFFICULT DECISIONS AT CORN EXCHANGE

The latest article in the Abergavenny Chronicle:

http://www.abergavennychronicle.com/article.cfm?id=106456&headline=Corn+Exchange+Crickhowell+forced+to+make+%27difficult+decisions%27+as+opening+looms&sectionIs=news&searchyear=2017

 

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RACE AGAINST TIME AT THE CORN EXCHANGE

It is a race against time to get the shops and one of the flats ready for the open days on Saturday and Sunday 11-3pm. The building is being transformed as walls are plasterboarded, doors and windows, kitchens and bathrooms fitted. Unfortunately, for Health and Safety reasons we can only open one of the one bedroomed flats but it will be fitted out with floors, a kitchen and bathroom so people can see what they will be getting. The ginnel, which will allow people access through the building to the flats, is being fitted out with stone tiles.

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BIG PUSH BEFORE OPEN DAYS

“BIG PUSH” BEFORE CORN EXCHANGE OPENS ITS DOORS
Up to twenty builders will be working at the former Corn Exchange pub in Crickhowell High Street this week – in a “big push” to get the building ready to show prospective tenants at two open days this weekend.
Corn Exchange Crickhowell Ltd (CECLtd) say they hope to have fitted new shop doors, rendered the front of the building and taken down the scaffolding by the end of the week. Inside, kitchens and bathrooms are being fitted in the first-floor flats and the shops are being plastered out.
CECLtd’s Managing Director, Dean Christy, said: “A massive amount of effort is being expended in one big push because we want to get the shops and flats as close to finished as possible. We want people to get a true feel for the great living and shopping spaces we are creating. “Even at this final stage of the project, there have been many challenges but credit must go to our builders who are pulling out all the stops to make the building viewable for the open day”.
The Corn Exchange is being opened up to home hunters and potential shopkeepers on Saturday and Sunday this week from 11-3pm. One of the biggest challenges for developer, Celtic Property and Lettings Ltd is to install the new steel staircase at the back of the building in time to allow safe access to the flats.
CECLtd’s Communications Director, Tim Jones, said: “Interest in the open days is really ramping up, now that we are so close to finishing. It will be easier for people to imagine themselves living or working in the building now that the walls are being plastered out. And it will be fantastic to see the doors and the final coat of render on the walls. The new face of The Corn Exchange will finally reveal itself.”
“People have followed the story of The Corn Exchange – how the town came together to stop it being turned into a supermarket – and they want to see it be a success.”
If you want more information about the shops and flats, you can email the team on info@cornexchangecrickhowell.co.uk

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NEWSLETTER SEPTEMBER 15TH

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NEW WINDOWS GO IN AT THE CORN EXCHANGE

It’s all go at The Corn Exchange …the new windows for the shops and doors for the flats are being fitted by our builders, Celtic Property and Lettings Ltd. The new windows will be so much better for shopkeepers. If you want to see more please come along on our open days on September 30th and October 1st 11-3pm.

 

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