Cuisine

CRISPY BITS

The Welder

- CLAIRE MCCALL

Restaurant openings, artisans, new products, events and more

If you fancy a yoga class followed by a cleansing organic juice (sipped through a bamboo straw) and then maybe a hand-crafted Paris Brest pastry oozing with hazelnut cream just to keep the balance right, head straight down to The Welder, a complex in the progressiv­e South Town neighbourh­ood of Christchur­ch where the hospitalit­y and lifestyle brands share a philosophy of holistic health and sustainabi­lity. This is retail and food therapy that’s good at heart and good for you – but none too precious. “We were prescripti­ve about the types of businesses we wanted within The Welder,” says James Springer, associate at Box 112, the developers behind the project. “It’s a curated mix of artisans that tie into the wellness theme.”

Six gritty warehouse workshops, some dating to the 1880s, were converted into one space centred around an urban garden planted with native trees. “We retained the character of the buildings as well as their single-level, human scale,” says James. Where once the air sparked with the fiery torch of industry now, within the 2000 square-metre space, up to 18 tenants operate in a like-minded village. Among the line-up is wholefoods refillery

Goodfor, Greenroots Juicery, the Great Pastry Shop, Two Raw Sisters, indoor-plants emporium Flourish Foliage, hair salon Corkin + Friends, and O-studio where you can take an ice bath and a sauna or float weightless­ly in pods filled with salt water.

For many of these independen­t operators, this is the next step beyond a market stall or a pop-up shop. Sally Hooper, who has two outlets at The Welder – a yakitori bar called Bar Yoku and Spanish wine and tapas bar Salut! Salut!, says there’s a real community spirit. “Tenants meet regularly to share ideas about business and sustainabi­lity. We are conscious of waste, for instance, and encourage the right thing but it’s a supportive environmen­t where no one is judgementa­l or pretentiou­s.”

The area of South Town is growing apace and urbanites will no doubt welcome an environmen­t to play and dine mindfully right on their doorstep. Above the reimagined facade is a muchphotog­raphed old workshop sign, crafted by local personalit­y known only as ‘Gordon, the welder’. Inside is a place to be quiet or to socialise beneath a man-made forest, a respite from the concrete and the cacophony that is the final phase of the rebuild. thewelder.nz /

 ?? EDITED BY TRACY WHITMEY ??
EDITED BY TRACY WHITMEY

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