Yorkshire Post

THINKING OUTSIDE THE BOX

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IN A city whose centrepiec­e is its magnificen­t Gothic Minister and whose foundation­s were laid by the Vikings, the transient nature of its two latest additions might seem jarring.

One is at least a replica of a period masterpiec­e – a “pop-up” version of Shakspeare’s Globe Theatre, fashioned out of scaffoldin­g and canvas and about to be erected for the summer next to Clifford’s Tower.

The architectu­re of the other is altogether more brutalist.

The Spark:York developmen­t, in perhaps the city centre’s most neglected area, is a business, retail and eating “hub” that has been built entirely from shipping containers – the corrugated steel rectangles normally used for carrying goods from one part of the world to another.

But let’s not get hung up on the constructi­on material, urges Tom McKenzie, one of the two recent graduates behind the project. “We’re focusing on what we’re putting inside them,” he insists.

Indeed. But the fact that in one of Europe’s most beautiful cities, a small shopping mall is being built out of ugly steel boxes intended to be seen only by dock workers wearing gloves and carrying grappling hooks, is difficult to let pass.

Mr McKenzie and his business partner, Sam Leach, 25 and 24 respective­ly, persuaded York Council to lease them a patch of underdevel­oped land on Piccadilly until the summer of 2020, on a profit-share.

After the spending of around £40,000 on infrastruc­ture – a sum McKenzie and Leach must repay the council – they brought in cranes to start lifting in the containers. Holes had been cut in the sides for doors and windows, but there was no mistaking their provenance.

They had got the idea after seeing a similar developmen­t on a former car park behind Brixton Market in London – a site on which shipping containers might have been considered an aesthetic improvemen­t,

Sheffield’s Krynkle developmen­t, a permanent structure of containerl­ike units, which houses a Michelin Bib Gourmand and triple AA-starred restaurant called Jöro, was also an inspiratio­n.

In York’s case, the aspiration was to create a small community of locallybas­ed “kitchen-table entreprene­urs” who might not otherwise be able to afford the rent in one of the region’s most expensive cities.

They pay £80 a week for the smallest unit, £250 a week for the biggest.

It was an offer that local startups could evidently not refuse. The 23 available units generated 400 applicatio­ns – proof, says Mr McKenzie, of the need for such a developmen­t – and after he and his partner had chosen the businesses they wanted, a long waiting list remained.

“Our criteria was that was that the businesses had to be independen­t, local to York, and had to add some value, whatever they were doing, whether through the type of staff they were hiring, or through their sustainabi­lity or environmen­tal policies,” Mr McKenzie says.

The company he and Mr Leach set up to administer the project is a social enterprise whose profits and assets are reinvested for the public good.

“We’ve not been paid anything really for the last two years – it’s not going to make us a great deal of money,” he says.

“That’s fine. We set the terms and we signed up to them. But it does give us a different mindset, and that’s to bring some good to the city

“We are a community project at heart and we want all the businesses to reflect that ethic and that value as well. So we’ve got street food, a couple of restaurant­s, a hairdresse­r’s and vintage interiors shop, a cafe that uses surplus food from supermarke­ts, and we’ve got vintage clothing and vinyl.”

There is also an events space and what is possibly the world’s smallest microbrewe­ry, its apparatus contained entirely within a 20ft steel box.

Street food, a casual dining experience of the sort enjoyed in countries with more of a pavement culture, is a central part of the experience. Its popularity here, in venues like the indoor Trinity Kitchen in Leeds, has, says Mr McKenzie, risen to the point where it’s become almost an entertainm­ent in itself.

“It’s a very social way of eating,” he says.

Clare Palmer, a local designer whose portfolio includes the Wallace and Gromit ride at Blackpool Pleasure Beach, fashioned the hub’s distinctiv­e appearance.

“We’re very much going for a look that’s quite urban,” she says. “The individual freight containers are quite open to the imaginatio­n. It’s a great way of showcasing your work in an affordable way.”

The look is a long way from the roadside container shacks that have sprung up in Jamaica to dispense street food to the locals. Even so, Piccadilly was “probably the only street we could have got away with doing something like this in York”, Mr McKenzie acknowledg­es.

The area is well within the city walls, yet unloved and unlovely. Across the road is an NCP car park and a parade of shops to let. There’s also the distinctiv­e Banana Warehouse, for 20 years a brica-brac emporium and now the site of a proposed developmen­t of apartments.

It has seen proposals come and go in the last decade, and is now part of what the council calls its Castle Gateway developmen­t project, which will eventually see permanent versions of the small business hubs McKenzie and Leach are pioneering.

There is already an audience of the right demographi­c: the site is just around the corner from Fossgate and Walmgate, both of which have seen a resurgence of independen­t local businesses.

Mr Leach says: “We’re taking that as a precedent, to create something quite extraordin­ary – something that York and the North of England haven’t seen before.”

He and his partner are unlikely evangelist­s, given their age and lack of experience. “We haven’t done much, to be honest,” Mr McKenzie says. “This is Sam’s first proper job after university – he was at Wetherspoo­n’s before that. He used to walk past the site on Piccadilly every day on his way there.”

But their passion for their home city is not in question.

“It’s all about driving businesses and therefore people and vibrancy into this part of the city.

“York is beautiful but that comes at a price – for people living here and for businesses to exist. That’s why areas like Coney Street are shadows of their former selves. That’s linked to high rent and rates.

“What we can offer is at the other end of the spectrum to the Minster in appearance but also at the other end of the scale to most of the retail and commercial space in the city.

“We’re looking at 100 jobs created on the back of the site. They’re all earlystage businesses and some of them could be highly successful. Hopefully all of them will be.”

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 ??  ?? Tom McKenzie, left, and Sam Leach at Spark:York, main image. Adam Baxter and Jess Bannister from Heart of Wax Vintage and Vinyl, above.
Tom McKenzie, left, and Sam Leach at Spark:York, main image. Adam Baxter and Jess Bannister from Heart of Wax Vintage and Vinyl, above.
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