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    Age Concern

    4.0 (3 reviews)
    Closed 9:00 am - 5:00 pm

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    Food For All Folk Centre and Charity Shop

    Food For All Folk Centre and Charity Shop

    (3 reviews)

    £

    I'd imagine Food for All to be just like what people who stick their nose up at charity shops…read moreimagine it to be like. But I don't see that as a bad thing, far from it in fact. It's like a car boot stall in a shop. Everything seems to be thrown in in some vague manner which if you spend long enough in there you start to suss it out. They have a few rails of clothes at the back, boxes of CDs, cassettes and videos as well as furniture, electrical items and children's toys. It is staffed by a couple of volunteers who seem to be perpetually having a cup of tea and a natter, which again, I think is great. I've picked up some amazing bargains in this place - a chair for £3, a rain coat for £1 and a Sufjan Stephens CD for £1. It's one of those places where you do really need to pop in regularly as they get the most unusual items in every week.

    A pair of shops on North Street - the charity shop is sparse and in need of some good donations but…read morethey do have a little display of homemade bath bombs and smellies. The folk centre next door is the meeting point for a local Hare Krishna group. The money from the shop goes to the group who buy and cook food for homeless people - you will see them in the bear pit (the large roundabout behind Debenhams you cross to get to Stokes Croft) at Monday lunchtime handing out a hot meal - fantastic work however you feel about their religion. If you live local think about giving the shop a few items.

    People's Republic of Stokes Croft - Taken from their website

    People's Republic of Stokes Croft

    (11 reviews)

    ££

    Stokes Croft is a sliver of land between the suburbs Kingsdown and Bishopston and inner city St…read more Pauls. It's definitely not the prettiest of areas. In fact it's pretty grey and depressing, with a fair few boarded up shops and a constant stream of cars roaring through on their way home or into the centre of Bristol. Possibly because people want to counter the dullness of the place some amazing grafitti has popped up here, which the grandly named People's Republic of Stokes Croft have claimed responsibility for. Some of the murals are beautiful (which of course are liable to change or get wiped out by the council without any notice) and I think it's a brave attempt to bring a little colour to what is a drab part of Bristol. There isn't yet a walking tour, but I can imagine one popping up - Bristol's urban art has been attracting a lot of interest recently. It's easy enough to see the sites by one's self though - a wonder along Jamaica Street and the road Stokes Croft itself should mean you see a few interesting sites. Their website reveals them as a fairly serious bunch. They have maps, ambitions to be some sort of official community group, and a mission statement that says they want to promote Stokes Croft as a 'cultural quarter'. I hope they go from strength to strength and continue to brighten up Stokes Croft. That their chairman Chris Chalkley was arrested for painting a 'Welcome to Stokes Croft' sign shows they've got a way to go before everyone comes round to this view.

    Stokes Croft: a gift and a curse to Bristol's culture. On one hand, this area of town is dodgy as…read morethey come, with antisocial behaviour and crime, this is a threatening place to be if you're alone and feeling vulnerable, especially towards the St James Roundabout. On the other hand, Stokes Croft is a gem. Full of artists and musicians, businesses like venues, cafes and arts centres are rapidly growing, what with Hamilton House, the Left Bank Centre, Metropolis and Cafe Kino all newly developing. When I miss Bristol, I miss places like Stokes Croft, but also can feel a little unsafe walking around there. It's definitely worth a visit. This is Bristol as much as Clifton is.

    Age Concern - nonprofit - Updated May 2026

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