September Highlights

September Highlights

September Highlights

Our control room was awarded the Gold Standard following an audit into the British Standards code of practice for the management and operation of CCTV cameras.

We saw an increase in footfall into the town increasing 8% on this time last year, with more than 760,000 visitors.

We welcomed Tracey Saunders and Sam Stockmans to the Rugby First team to manage communications and events.

Libertine Burger, an independent business from Leamington, announced that they would be opening in the Swan Centre in October.

 

Rugby Food & Drink Festival

Rugby Food & Drink Festival

Rugby Food & Drink Festival

Saturday 28 September

Our annual food festival is back and has all of the ingredients to make a great day out. Visitors will be able to stroll around a selection of food and drink stalls, visit the pop-up kitchen where a variety of lively cookery demonstrations will be taking place and see chef Kwoklyn Wan in action. We will be encouraging visitors to explore the town’s food and drink offer and highlighting menus and promotions that are on offer.

 

 

Rugby Unwrapped

Rugby Unwrapped

Rugby Unwrapped

One of the newest additions to the town is Rugby Unwrapped. The shop, located in Church Street, supplies a wide range of dried food and other household products, all sold on a “bring your own packaging” basis.

 

The partners in the business, Clair Saxton and Sharon Lee are two friends who got the idea a couple of years ago after seeing a similar business in Devon. “We agreed it would be a great idea for Rugby and started researching how to go about getting it off the ground”, Clair explains.

 

Things came to a head in the spring when changes in circumstances and the opportunity for take voluntary redundancy came about. “It was the right moment to go for it”, she says.

 

The interior of the shop is light and welcoming. There are two levels, with more products available up a short flight of stairs behind the counter. Essentially, you need to bring your own containers, including suitable receptacles for the liquid products. Purchasing is on a “weigh, fill, weigh again and pay” basis, and the shop is equipped with electronic scales designed specifically for this type of retail operation.

 

Rugby Unwrapped is obviously based around the ideals of sustainability, reducing waste and using recyclable or biodegradable materials, but the business partners are keen to stress this is not just a shop for hardcore “eco warriors”.

 

“Our belief is that, rather than having a small number of people radically changing their lifestyles and everyone else carrying on as before, it is better for that wider group to start doing something different”, Sharon explains. “In other words, a large number of people making small changes will have more effect than a small number making big changes”.

 

Clair agrees. “The more you start getting into this, it becomes your normal way of buying things, and you start to learn about other products that you can use. There are some incredible businesses out there making environmentally friendly and sustainable products”.

 

Along with a wide range of foodstuffs including lentils, cereals and spices, the Rugby Unwrapped portfolio covers a full suite of household cleaning products. “We get them from Fill Refill in Northamptonshire”, explains Sharon. “They make all their own products without using dyes or harsh chemicals, and only natural scents”. This aspect of the offering covers hand soaps, washing up liquid, laundry detergent and powder, dishwasher powder, toilet cleaner and fabric conditioner.

 

One of the most tempting items in the range are the packets of crisps on sale in the shop. “We get these from farmers in Herefordshire”, says Clair. “They use their own potatoes and all their flavourings are natural. They taste amazing and of course, the packets are 100% compostable”. 

https://www.facebook.com/RugbyUnwrapped/ 

 

Rugby World Cup 2019

Rugby World Cup 2019

Rugby World Cup 2019

20 September – Sunday 2 November

As the birthplace of rugby, the town will kick off the Rugby World Cup with Regent Street, Sheep Street and High Street being kitted out with an aerial display of decorated rugby balls. Along Sheep Street, High Street and Market Place there will also be a pavement trail of rugby ball graphics. Plus 20 businesses will have their windows dressed for the event to support the different countries taking part in the World Cup.

A packed events calendar of sport, arts and culture are planned throughout the games, culminating in a Japanese themed fireworks display and Taiko Drumming performance, which you can read more about here www.therugbytown.co.uk/celebraterugby