The Scotsman

Could Stirling hold the future of the high street?

- Laura Westring Laura Westring is an Alfred Landecker Democracy fellow, a trustee of the John Byrne Award and leads public affairs at Amiqus

My retirement fantasy has always been to become the female embodiment of Bernard Black and according to the proprietor­s of Book Nook, Stirling, I am not alone.

Jasmine Stenhouse and Leanne Brown are the best kind of double act: finishing each other’s sentences as they tell me about the boozy lunch during which they both concluded that their English degrees weren’t going to lead to fame and fortune; which led to them buying a book on business; which led to them opening their thriving second hand bookshop and café at number 24 Upper Craigs last September.

The two friends were handed the keys to the drab magnolia unit that was once a bookies on the day of the first Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 and proceeded to spend the next two months sitting on the floor with Jasmine’s baby boy, planning the warm and inviting space now furnished with green bookshelve­s that they painted themselves.

“We were millennial­s with no savings, just a dream really,” says Jasmine. “And we had no idea what a hit it was going to be. One of our first tweets went viral and then people started coming from all over to visit, even local authors,” adds Leanne. “It was so busy, within two weeks we had to make our first hire. Then we brought on a baker and life just got better.”

“People have responded to it so well”, says Jasmine. “Our regulars love escaping into the books we take great care to curate. The mystery book subscripti­ons have been selling out every month.”

This community-building business model, combined with a readiness to switch to mostly online or click and collect sales at short notice has also been key to the success of Creative Stirling at 44 King Street.

Spread over two floors, Creative Stirling is simultaneo­usly a shop, community hub and an events and co-working space that also

hosts the local radio station, run by founding director Joe Hall and curator Paul Jenkins.

Paul, whose fashion label once supplied Topshop and Harvey Nichols, now runs the Made in Stirling store in which local artists sell their wares. He returned to Scotland from London for the “quiet and quality of life” and has become an Instagram star.

Successful illustrato­r and greetings card creator Jon Bishop (The Grey Earl) told me, “I am really proud to be involved in Creative Stirling as an independen­t artist. Being able to try out new collection­s and make decisions in store enhances my brand. It’s a great model.”

If there are any publishers reading, having met through Creative Stirling, The Grey Earl and I are now working on a children’s picture book series. Yet another example of how creative community spaces hold not only cultural or social value, but entreprene­urial value too.

Founder Joe Hall said, “We exist to provide a community hub for local creatives, but we’ve also had a significan­t economic impact through Made in Stirling. It’s time to give town centres a new sense of place by making social enterprise and business for good a central part of pandemic recovery strategies.”

In an economy that increasing­ly demands we seek employment and establish side-gigs to supplement incomes we need more Book Nooks and Creative Stirlings to create jobs and make us all happier by buying local, sustainabl­e.

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 ??  ?? 0 The Book Nook shop in Stirling
0 The Book Nook shop in Stirling

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