5th May 2012
Saturday 19th May
10am – 4pm
Come down to the top level of the Darwin Centre to get your free health check. You will be able to get your blood pressure taken and your cholesterol checked as well as getting advise on how you can avoid having a stroke – ALL FOR FREE!
5th May 2012
Shoppers visiting Shrewsbury’s busy Darwin and Pride Hill Shopping Centres are being urged to get their blood pressure checked as part of Stroke Awareness Day.The event, organised by Peter Savage of Shawbury and Mid-Shropshire Rotary Club, will see Rotarians out in force on Saturday, May 19, offering shoppers and visitors free blood pressure checks on the top level of the Darwin Centre.
Peter says many people are simply unaware that they have high blood pressure which is putting them at risk of a stroke unless they make changes to their lifestyle and seek medical attention.
He said: “We are runnin g this event in conjunction with Darwin and Shrewsbury Rotary Clubs, the West Midlands Ambulance Service and the Stroke Association. The Darwin Centre management team are kindly allowing us to use vacant Unit 10 which is near to M&S. We will have a stroke nurse on hand to give advice as well as other medical professionals.The event will run between 10am and 4pm and will offer a free blood pressure monitoring service with information and advice on stroke related health issues.”
It is estimated that around 16 million people in the UK have high blood pressure and around a third are unaware of the condition. And at least 40% of strokes could be prevented each year if people checked their blood pressure and took steps to control it.
Peter added: “In 2011, more than 30,000 had their blood pressure taken at a Rotary Know Your Blood Pressure event and more than 4,000 were diagnosed with high blood pressure.We want as many shoppers as possible to take advantage of the free blood pressure checks and advice on offer. It could be the best decision of your life. Over the years this Rotary event may have prevented thousands of people from having a stroke. It might be quite worrying to discover you could be at risk of a stroke but once highlighted, it’s possible to make changes which will reduce that risk.”
Peter said: “The team will welcome any query, even if it is just for a chat, and help you find out how strokes can be prevented through simple lifestyle choices. Regular exercise, healthy eating and giving up smoking can all help to regulate blood pressure.”
Rachel Seyler of the Stroke Association said: “Thousands of strokes could be prevented every year if more people took steps to monitor their blood pressure. You can keep your blood pressure under control by making a few healthy lifestyle changes. For example, eating a balanced diet low in saturated fat, exercising regularly and cutting your salt intake will go a long way. Knowing your blood pressure is the vital first step and I strongly urge everyone to go and get theirs checked.”
2nd May 2012
We’ll collect them for FREE to help save lives
Cal 0844 2489188 or book online at www.bhf.org.uk/collection
· Sofas and armchairs
· Lounge furniture
· Bed & Bedroom furniture
· Tables & Chairs
· TVs, DVDs, HiFi’’s & docking stations
· Washing Machines
· Fridges & Dishwashers
· Small electrical items
British Heart Foundation
Furniture & Electrical Store
31 -32 Middle Mall,
Darwin Centre
Shrewsbury, SY1 1BW
20th April 2012
It is great news for Shrewsbury that Debenhams has been lined up as a lead retailer at the heart of its revamped New Riverside shopping centre.
For all the investment, it is still important to have a showpiece, big-name store, to be a flagship of this £150 million development which will help the county town keep up with the pace.
At a time when other shopping areas are feeling under pressure, this is a chance for Shrewsbury to cement its credentials as a significant regional player by bringing in a household name retailer.
It is important because it is already a vote of confidence in the potential of the development. Such confidence can be infectious. When the major stores stake their futures in new shopping centres, it creates an impetus which draws in others in their wake.
Debenhams has signed a pre-let agreement to take on a 95,000 sq ft site in the new centre. This news comes as Debenhams posted higher profits.
In the most difficult of environments, the firm is playing its cards well and making the right decisions.
These are exciting times for Shrewsbury on various fronts. Waitrose, that upmarket supermarket, has plans to come to the town, having dipped its toe successfully with the small store it currently has in the town centre.
These are steps to maintaining the county town as a thriving, bustling retail centre which can offer both the big stores that draw crowds of shoppers, and the smaller independent shops that offer the special character which is a unique selling point.
Shrewsbury has many laurels on which it could rest. But it cannot be content to stand still – as that would mean moving backwards in the current highly dynamic retail scene.
20th April 2012
Debenhams will be the flagship store in Shrewsbury’s £150 million New Riverside shopping complex, it has been revealed.
A pre-let agreement has been signed for the department store to take on a 95,000 sq ft site in the new centre. It will be joined by 50 other stores in the showpiece shopping complex, which will create a total of 700 jobs.
Bosses at Debenhams are tight-lipped about the total amount of jobs available at its new store.
But today the developers said the store would act as a ‘catalyst’ and attract other big names to the town.
Business leaders also welcomed the news of Debenhams’ arrival, saying it will encourage more footfall.
The New Riverside project is being managed by Ignis Asset Management and the Shearer Property Group. David Rodger for Ignis said: “We are delighted to have signed an agreement with Debenhams.
“We believe this will be the catalyst that attracts the best brand names to Shrewsbury to complement the town’s existing independent retail offer.”
Guy Shearer, of SPG, said: “This is a key milestone in this important project.
“New Riverside will enhance the reputation of Shrewsbury as a major retail and tourist destination.”
Meanwhile, Peter Bettis, chairman of Shrewsbury Business Chamber said: “It is great. It is really positive and will encourage more footfall.
Anything that creates wealth in the town is a good thing and this will bring lots of jobs.
“Shrewsbury is a growth area for Shropshire and this store will bring in people not just around the county but also from Wales. We should enjoy this investment in the whole area.”
Planning permission for the development was granted earlier this month.
As well as the town’s full line department store, the new shopping complex will have 50 stores and 12 restaurants. There will also be room for an extra 750 car park spaces.
23rd March 2012
EGGS-CITED children visiting Shrewsbury’s Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres at the weekend joined in the hunt with the Easter Bunny for some hidden chocolate treats.
A sleepy, forgetful, accordion-playing Easter bunny and his glamorous assistant, Miss Egg Timer, took children and their families on magical tours around the popular shopping centres in search of chocolate eggs on Good Friday.
Kevin Lockwood, Manager of the Centres, said: “I think it would be fair to say that the adults were having as much fun as the children and there was a lot of chocolate being eaten. They all seemed to be having an eggs-cellent time. We are a very family-friendly here and with it being the school holidays, we felt it was only right to invite the Easter Bunny and Miss Egg Timer to join us and make shopping that bit more fun for everyone.”
The tours lasted for half an hour with lots of singing, dancing and playing games along the way. All the children who took part had a chance to enjoy a chocolate egg at the end of their hunt.
23rd March 2012
Senior staff at M&S in Shrewsbury are in strict training for a charity 10K run.
Over 20 of the store’s senior management team in the Darwin Centre are getting in shape for the Market Drayton 10K which takes place on Sunday, May 13.
All the proceeds of their efforts will go to M&S’s nominated national charity, The Prostate Cancer Charity, the most common cancer among men, with all money raised going towards the charity’s nurse-led Helpline.
Shrewsbury M&S Manager Martin Woodhouse, who will be donning shorts and T-shirt on the day to tackle the course, said: “We’re making a big effort for the charity and the response from the staff has been magnificent.
“Some of them are very fit and will probably have no problem with 10K at all but even the less gifted athletes like me are giving it a go and we’re determined to get to the finishing line.It’s a very worthy cause and one which deserves to get more attention and apart from the run we’ve also done a sponsored walk, a sponsored lunch and cake stalls though I don’t think the last two were exactly the best preparation for Market Drayton.
“Our staff here always give it a go and we’ve previously cycled the length of the River Severn on exercise bikes here in the store and we link up with the Bodytech gym in Shrewsbury who help us out.”
Kevin Lockwood, Manager of the Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres, said: “Martin and his team are always up for charity efforts and they make a tremendous effort.
“They also play a really active role in the life of the community and are always at the heart of any community activity and anything aimed at promoting the town – as he says, he was here ten years ago and has spent the time since trying to get back to Shrewsbury so the place means a lot to him.”
19th March 2012
Charlie Esfandiarina, a prison officer at Shrewsbury Gaol, will do the ride to raise money for the fund in aid of Cancer Research UK at the store in Shrewsbury’s bustling Darwin Centre.
His partner, Vanessa Morgan, is a shop assistant at the store and she and other members of staff will join him for sections of the route. TK Maxx Store Manager Elena D’Alesio said: “As a store we want to raise as much as possible and we are delighted Vanessa’s partner, Charlie, is doing a sponsored cycle ride of 100 miles in a day to raise even more funds for Cancer research UK.”
Charlie, who came to the UK from his native Iran in the early 70s, says he enjoys cycling and thought it would be a good way to boost the amount of cash raised by the Darwin Centre store.
He added: “I took up cycling after my quadruple heart by-pass about eight years ago. I used to play a lot of rugby but I’m getting too old for that I am afraid! I enjoy cycling as I find running a bit hard on the knees and other joints. When Vanessa told me about the fund-raising the store was doing I thought a sponsored ride would be a good way to raise some extra cash. I will be joined by several members of the store’s staff who will be joining me for parts of the ride. I’ve worked out a circular 100 mile route taking in Montgomery, Bishop’s Castle, Craven Arms, Much Wenlock and Uffington before returning to Shrewsbury. I think it will take me around 10 hours including a rest break or two. It is certainly worth it to raise funds for a very important charity. I’ll be starting nice and early on Thursday, April 26. Anyone who wants to sponsor me can do so at the TK Maxx shop in the Darwin Centre.”
It is just one of a number of fund-raising efforts by staff at the store this month for Cancer Research UK including having a special donations cage installed on the shop floor in the Darwin Centre.
T K Maxx staff are handing out collection bags for customers to fill with unwanted clothes and bric-a-brac items that can be stored in the cage and later sold through Cancer Research UK charity shops with each bag raising an average of £30.
Elena D’Alesio added that TK Maxx had raised £10 million for Cancer Research UK since 2004 with £6 million being used specifically to fund research into beating cancer in children.
She said: “This year, as a company, we want to raise a further £2.5 million to help even more children survive cancer. We will be raising money in store by giving out charity bags which we hope our customers will fill with clothes, books, CDs, DVDs and bric-a-brac, in fact anything unbreakable. Across the company our target is 80,000 bags from customers and with each bag on average raising £30 that’s a huge amount of money.”
Kevin Lockwood, Manager of the Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres, said: “It’s a tremendous effort by Charlie to pitch in like this to help the charity.Staff at T K Maxx and so many of the stores at the centres raise so much money every year for charity that it really shows just how seriously they take their roles as very much part of the local community.”
16th March 2012
One of the most familiar faces in Shrewsbury’s busy Darwin Centre has hung up her apron after 18 years. Sarah Glaub, who for the last 11 years has run Masarella’s Café in the Centre’s Middle Level, has said goodbye to her many regulars at the popular stopping place.
In that time she reckons she has served over 2,000 customers a week who have over 18 years enjoyed nearly two million cups of tea and coffee. The 42-year-old mum from Bellevue, Shrewsbury, said: “I’ve loved the job over the years and made many friends but I want to spend more time with my daughter and that’s the reason I’m going. I began as a catering assistant, serving at tables, and then I became assistant manager after two years and 11 years ago I was made manager.
It’s sad to be going because it’s been a lot of fun but I’m doing it for the right reasons as Chayanne is six now. I’ve got somewhere else to go to which gives me more time with her and my husband, Michael.”
Russell Hall, Operations Manager of the Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Centres, said: “Sarah has been a fixture in the Darwin Centre and has helped make Massarella’s a success. She’s been a lovely person to work with over the years and we’re sad to see her go but we wish her all the very best and we’re sure she’ll be dropping in regularly as a shopper.”
Sarah added: “I do have lots of regulars and I’ve been inundated with gifts and cards and I’m very grateful to everyone for being so kind. I have only been doing my job but it’s lovely to feel so appreciated. People are very kind and I’ll be calling in often to see everyone. There are 12 of us working here and they’ve been great and I shudder to think how many cups of tea we’ve served over the years. I began in the Darwin Centre two years earlier, working in the café in Stacks, next door to Massarella’s, which sold oak furniture. I only moved next door for the job and I’ve been there ever since.”
16th February 2012
Businesses in Shropshire are being given the chance to dip their toes in the retail waters thanks to the Shrewsbury Shopping Centres. Flexible deals are being offered for temporary lets which can be as short as just a week in the Pride Hill Lower Level and Riverside Centres.
Kevin Lockwood, Manager of the town’s busy Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres, said: “The Mary Portas report into the high street made 28 recommendations and this is our interpretation of some of those points.
“We want to give local traders the opportunity to take units on a temporary basis. This gives them the chance to test the waters without making a major financial commitment or tying them into a long-term rental. It means they can fully explore all the pros and cons of taking a tenancy but without the risk – it could be the start of something big for them. We’re looking at being flexible in terms of the length of time businesses want to use the units to trade from. We’re also being flexible about the numbers of businesses – if two or three people wanted to rent a unit between them then we’re happy to look at that as an option.”
Wroxeter Vineyard have had seasonal rentals and so have Fresh Start which showcases the handicrafts of prisoners from Shrewsbury Gaol while Turner Furniture have taken the huge former T J Hughes unit after a successful short-term stay in the Pride Hill Centre where they have also opened a second store.
Kevin Lockwood added: “Basically it is for people who want to see how their business will get on in a retail environment and we have the type of package to suit everyone, short term, mid-term or long term. It might be someone who wants to see if a long term future in a major shopping centre is the next step for their business or it could be for someone who only ever intends to take a short term lease. Perhaps they have a seasonal trade or they may have a surplus of stock which they want to shift or they could be a market trader or home business looking to take the next step. After all Marks and Spencer began with a stall in Leeds Market and look at where that has led.Businesses need to be more flexible these days and we are responding to that by being more supportive ourselves. We have the space available and if you want to come along and have a chat about it we may be able to help.”
For enquiries about shop lets contact Shrewsbury Shopping on 01743 272322 or e-mail .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
16th February 2012
Budding entrepreneurs from across Shropshire will put their business skills to the test in Shrewsbury’s bustling Darwin Centre this weekend. The centre will play host to Shropshire Young Enterprise as up to 15 teams of school students and their embryo businesses set up on the Centre’s Lower Level Blue Carpet area.
The day-long Trade Fair will showcase the range of enterprises set up by pupils from secondary schools across the county and organiser David Barker, Area Manager for Young Enterprise, said: “The students involved are aged from 15 to 19 and this will be an exciting day for them and a real introduction to the world of work. These groups have to set up and run their own companies during a school year and by the end of it we hope to have created a group of young businesspeople.
“On Saturday (February 25) we will take over the bottom level of the Darwin Centre and the students will arrive with their products, set up their stalls and transform the area into a mini trade fair. We will have the Lord Mayor of Shrewsbury there and plenty of media interest and it should be a really good experience for them.
“The Darwin Centre is a good place for them to learn, the footfall is high and it is a good opportunity to sell their wares and advertise their services to the general public.”Kevin Lockwood, Manager of the Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres, said: “We’re delighted to host this event and to have these young school students cut their business teeth here in the Darwin Centre. This is a serious business for them and they’re out to make money and that’s the best way to learn lessons which will stand them in good stead whichever walk of life they embark on. From our point of view it obviously also adds to the already varied retail mix we have here at the Shrewsbury Shopping Centres and it is highly likely that many of these young people will go on to work in the retail sector. Some of them may well work here and I’m sure the experience they have gained will be very valuable to them in their careers.”
Young Enterprise has been in existence since 1963 and annually involves over 5,000 schools in England and Wales while those who have been involved likely to go to better paid and more rewarding jobs and be twice as likely to start their own businesses.
David Barker added: “Most of the businesses tend to be arts and crafts based but while they are often quite simple they can also be very innovative. Young people today are very aware of TV programmes like Young Apprentice and Dragons Den and they want their 15 minutes of fame and this provides them with a fantastic experience. When they go away to university or apply for jobs they can talk about something they have done which is outside the classroom and so it broadens their range of experience.
“The turnover tends to be in the hundreds rather than the thousands but at the end of the year when we close them down we pass them on to the Prince’s Trust and if they have a viable idea then they can end up as fully-fledged businesses. This year we have some recycling businesses, using old clothing to make draft excluders etc, jewellery businesses and a company from the Marches School, Oswestry, which makes Swedish Candles, mini patio heaters made from logs. A lot of schools have quite sophisticated design and technology departments and the principle we teach them is that whatever the raw material, if they can add value to it then it will sell.”
3rd February 2012
Saturday 31st March - Come down to Early Learning Centre to join in their Easter Fun Day
3rd February 2012
1. Pixi photos in store from Tuesday 24th April - Saturday 28th April
2. Expectant parent event on Sunday 29th April with demonstrations and specialist guests to talk to (i.e. midwife etc)To attend you can pop into store to collect their invitation and on the day they will receive a free goody bag
27th January 2012
Artist and self-confessed petrolhead Ian Cook owns more than 200 cars – and he likes nothing better than running his Ferrari 458 Italia through a pool of paint!
And for three days next week he will be running a whole fleet of his vehicles through paint at the Darwin Shopping Centre in Shrewsbury.
Ian, whose paintings have been featured on television’s Top Gear, will be putting his radio-controlled model cars through their paces from Monday, January 27, through to Wednesday, January 29.
The 28 year old has managed to turn his boyhood hobbies of painting and playing with radio controlled cars into an internationally acclaimed art form.
He creates incredible works of art using model radio controlled cars as his paintbrushes.
The first to put him on the art world map was a portrait of F1 champion Lewis Hamilton for Reebok. It was the size of a three storey building and hung next to Tower Bridge in the run up to the 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix.
He said: “I’ve always been a petrolhead and loved art, so it’s great to mix my two biggest passions.”
“This is my first visit to Wales. I will set up about 8am and start painting about 10am and finish a complete work by 5 or 6pm.”
Kevin Lockwood, the Manager of the Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres in the town, just can’t wait to see Ian at work.
He said: “His paintings are absolutely sensational and I’m astonished that he can create such fantastic work with remote-control cars.
“It should be a fantastic attraction whether you’re interested in art or you love cars – it brings a whole new meaning to the expression ‘painted to the road’.”
Ian, a former art lecturer who lives near Birmingham, is in huge demand world-wide and recently completed a project for Jaguar Land Rover, using just Jaguar Land Rover cars.
Another commission took him to Barcelona where he completed an art work for a group of companies who provide paint to the car repair industry and he has also done on with Arsenal players for Citroen at The Emirates Stadium.
He explained: “It’s the familiar pop art commercial culture thing, using certain brands to create specific images. Would Campbell’s soups be as famous without Warhol?”
Ian has a degree in fine art painting, but has always been a car enthusiast and even did work experience shadowing car engineers and designers.
He hit on the idea of painting with radio controlled cars when he was given an RV car by a now former girlfriend for Christmas in 2006.
“She told me ‘don’t take it down your studio, and don’t get paint on it’ and the idea was born.
“From this I did colour wheels and abstract pieces, and then moved on to images, this included logos, portraits and cars. But cars were the most effective,” he said.
To create his paintings, Ian applies the paint to the paper and then runs the cars through the paint. All the cars are different sizes with different tracks and widths.
It may seem an expensive way to create a work of art but Ian says it can actually work out cheaper.
“The RV cars I use range from £10 to £25 maximum. If I wanted a decent sable paint brush it could cost £80-90,” he said. When he has finished with the cars, he can even sell them on.
He uses a “fleet” of non-branded cars for most of his artwork, unless it is a specific commission which requires him to use a particular make of car to match the painting – such as the Jaguar Land Rover commission. Some of his work has appeared on TV’s Top Gear.
He worked with Ferrari and used five new ‘paintbrushes’ supplied to him, including one of the car he was painting , the Ferrari 458 Italia, which Ian describes as a great looking car and a great paintbrush.
His studio is the Heritage Motor Centre in Gaydon where he is currently artist in residence.
Ian’s website is www.popbangcolour.com and he can also be followed on Twitter ‘@Popbangcolour’ and through YouTube and Facebook Group “Pop bang Colour – artwork by Ian Cook”.
4th October 2011
Budgen Motors – for the best new and used cars in Shrewsbury. Simply sign up for news updates with Shrewsbury-shopping.co.uk on page http://www.shrewsbury-shopping.co.uk/contact-us/ and receive a voucher for £250 off any used car, and an MOT for just £25. To visit their website go to; http://www.budgenmotorcars.co.uk
13th September 2011
The Clarks Adults Autumn 2011 range now is now in stock at the Shrewsbury Shopping Centres!
Discover the new Autumn collection from Clarks. Fashionable styles for all the family – from women’s statement boots and court shoes, to men’s loafer shoes and a wide range of kids autumn shoes and boots!
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1st September 2011
- Big fashion for your little boys and girls -
River Island makes a triumphant return with its Autumn Winter 2011 Boys and Girls collection. Available online from September, the range continues its fashion credibility with a mix of lightweight and heavy layers in relaxed cuts and muted palettes.
Individuality shines as the bohemian collection embraces easy pieces with a stylish twist to bring out the true personality of the wearer. Composing Autumn Winter key trends; coats, jeans, boots and knitwear captures the essence of youth.
For the boys, River Island leaps with a distinct athleticism providing the perfect looks that covers day to evening wear. Flannel Wool Trimmed Shirts, bright puffa jackets and colour block wool knit jumpers convey the mood of the collection.
Refined and quirky, the girl’s collection takes inspiration from UK street style. Intarsia knit cardigans, printed playsuit and floral blazers adds to the cool and retro vibe of the collection. Accessories and separates such as our leopard print tights, polka dot handbags and suede ballerina pumps enhances the trend.
River Island kidswear charms with a style that easily conforms to the River Island signature. The collection combines the favourite items from the woman and menswear ranges incorporating the design aesthetic into a smaller silhouette for a bigger impact. It has never been so trendy to be a young kid and River Island Boys and Girls collection embraces that fact!
1st September 2011
Following on from our successful re-launch in March, River Island is proud to announce the new Chelsea Girl Autumn Winter Collection launching in stores in September. Chelsea Girl was a high street favourite of the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s before evolving into River Island in 1988.
The collection has a vintage spirit with a unique 21st century twist. The clothing ranges from affordable mini-skirts and shorts, crop t-shirts, wide leg trousers and printed maxi dresses in rich and exhuberant tones that have a trend driven appeal. Floral and geometric-inflected prints, wispy fabrics and sinuous shapes bring together a discernibly bohemian aesthetic that captures the Chelsea Girl mystique.
Diaphanous, romantic floral patterns in vintage tones and a dizzying whirl of paisley look fresh, new and subtly styled. Elsewhere peasant sleeves and high waistlines reaffirms Chelsea Girl’s timeless streak whilst being consistent with the new romanticism dominating fashion now. Separates in the flattering form of paper bag denim are given a distressed edge for a casual and chic look. Crop t-shirts and canvas bags resurrects the emblematic Chelsea Girl logo while the hand crocheted dress is reminiscent of the evocative and iconic campaign images which made Chelsea Girl a fashion favourite.
The Chelsea Girl message is clear. The beloved high street label that made the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s tick is back bringing affordable, trend led clothing that made it a fashion favourite.