Bristol Post

Sparks Queues form as department store with a difference opens doors

- Tanya WATERWORTH tanya.waterworth@reachplc.com

QUEUES of people lined up outside the new Bristol Sparks store in Broadmead which opened at on Saturday. The huge new department store has replaced the old Marks and Spencer.

There was a buzz of excitement as shoppers were allowed through the doors to “the department store with a difference” as it’s no longer where you only buy clothes, but also to get advice, be educated and express creativity.

Taking a look through the ground floor, there’s still plenty of fashion along with a host of other offerings. This includes an energy help desk, a Baby Bank Network and an art gallery to name a few, as well as a range of food and drink and lovely gift shops.

With sustainabi­lity being a focus for the new centre, there are shops and stalls which repair and recycle goods, a second hand furniture and recycling electrical­s. There are also lots of exhibition­s and for commuters wanting to find out about bus routes, First Bus and Travel West have a desk.

The former M&S store closed in January 2022 and the new store with focus on arts and sustainabi­lity has two floors. The upper floor has rehearsal rooms which are open for booking, with an option for schools to book space as well.

Education charity Global Goals Centre together with Artspace Lifespace have teamed up to turn the store into a “vibrant, positive venue where local people and visitors can shop, recycle and explore what a greener and fairer creative future could look like.”

Ahead of the opening, Jenny Foster, project lead at Global Goals Centre said: “We’re hoping Sparks

We’re hoping Sparks will enable people to make more sustainabl­e choices, to recycle goods, just to make things more accessible and affordable for people

Jenny Foster

will enable people to make more sustainabl­e choices, to recycle goods, just to make things more accessible and affordable for people.”

Shoppers can also help to make a difference as a clothes swap will help reduce the number of unwanted clothes going to waste every year.

 ?? ?? Shoppers take a look at Sparks, which is now open on the site of the former M&S store
Shoppers take a look at Sparks, which is now open on the site of the former M&S store

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