Saturday, 23 November 2013

Cadwaladers comes to town!

Eastgate has now entered its second year and continues to draw widely recognised brands to Llanelli for the first time. On October 30th, a planning application for Unit 8 was filed by Cadwaladers, a prestigious name in the restaurant sector, whose specialized ice cream café will become the third Welsh retailer to open shop at Eastgate.


Cadwaladers was established in 1927 (just six years after the Jenkins family went into business) as a convenience store in Gwynedd and began to specialize in ice cream from 1945 onwards. The original outlet in Criccieth evolved into an ice cream shop and later grew into the modern café-ice cream parlour hybrid. Through the 1980s and up to the present day, a further three Cadwaladers cafés have opened in the Gwynedd county (Porthmadog, Portmeirion, Pwllheli), two in Conwy (Betws-y-Coed, Llandudno), three in Cardiff (one in St David's 2 and two outlets at Cardiff Bay), one in Barry, and two shops over the border at the Trafford Centre in Manchester and Trentham Gardens, Staffordshire.

The opening of a branch in Carmarthenshire will entrench the Cadwaladers name among major Welsh brands and add momentum to the wider expansion of the company as it aims to open up to 5 new stores annually until 2016.

Interestingly, recent expansion efforts have been something of a marketing experiment where the focus was on variety, broadening the customer base, and adapting to local needs. The arrival of Cadwaladers Ice Cream Cafe in South Wales coincided with the creation of two "sub brands".


'The Yuddle Bar at Cadwaladers' first appeared at the site of the existing ice cream cafe in Cardiff's St Davids 2 shopping centre on 2nd June 2012. This was joined by a smaller Yuddle stall in the same shopping centre, and on July 3rd another Yuddle Bar opened at the Trafford Centre in Manchester. Creativity and customer choice was the central concept of The Yuddle Bar at Cadwaladers, where ice cream flavours and toppings could be combined in any way possible. Much like an ordinary ice cream parlour but with extra floor decorations.
Before

Post-Yuddle upgrade



A second sub brand, 'The Coffee House at Cadwaladers' opened on 15th August 2012 in the Red Dragon Centre, Cardiff Bay. This variation of the ice cream café distanced itself from the playful simplicity of Yuddle Bar, adopting instead a "modern urban chic" look with "vintage grandeur" and shifting the emphasis from ice cream to coffee, cakes and snacks. In other words, the family business came of age and conformed with the restaurant trends of the day. And by dispensing with the authentic heritage of the Cadwaladers family (who, incidentally, have not possessed ownership of the business since 1983), The Coffee House was able to seduce consumers with that same artificial vintage décor found in major coffee shop chains.


Phase 3: The Coffee House at Cadwaladers
Following the success of the Cardiff Bay experiment, The Coffee House at Cadwaladers (CHAC) supplanted the Yuddle Bar in St Davids 2 and, bearing little resemblance to the original ice cream shops, the rebranded Cadwaladers returned to North Wales in December 2012 with a CHAC redesign to the Porthmadog shop. This year, a new CHAC was opened in Barry on 18th March, while the Pwllheli café received a CHAC upgrade in June.


It has not yet been announced which kind of Cadwaladers café will fill the newly leased unit at Eastgate, although blueprints in the planning applications clearly depict a shopfront with the CHAC name that also features the traditional Ice Cream Shop signage and colour schemes. From this information, I have created this 3D mock up of the new shop:


 
 



Cardiff-based architects HLN have been hired for the Eastgate Cadwaladers. Interestingly, in their November 6th announcement via Twitter, they describe the project as 'the first of the new concept @CoffeeHousesuk', making specific mention of CHAC.



Despite their success, the CHAC developments are intended to complement rather than replace the Ice Cream Cafés, and the inconsistencies in Cadwaladers branding looks set to continue. As of November 2013, the company's main website has fallen victim to the ongoing identity switching/splitting, with a new site at cadwaladers.com under development. A dual operation of the main company and its sub-brand can be observed on Twitter, where @CoffeeHousesuk reminds followers that: "We are rebranding! Please follow @cadwaladers for exciting updates about our stores!". Similarly, on Instagram the company has two official pages: statigr.am/cadwaladers & statigr.am/thecoffeehouseuk.

Could the rebranding eventually do away with duplication and return to the original name? If the new website address and main Twitter account are anything to go by, then it is also significant that the Facebook page contains no mention of the CHAC brand.

Two interrelated factors seem to drive this whole 'identity crisis'. First, the Cadwaladers name is primarily associated with ice cream. Second, people don't want ice cream all year round. Just as the CHAC formula highlights the sale of cakes and hot drinks, the Eastgate Cadwaladers may need to do this under the 'Ice Cream Café' banner. A smart move, then, to open shop during the winter and build a reputation for serving soups and hot drinks.

Whatever the outcome of the rebranding, Cadwaladers is coming to Carmarthenshire for the long haul. With its production facilities now being relocated from Llanystumdwy to a larger site in South Wales, the company will also create jobs in the region. At Eastgate, recruitment for store supervisors and baristas has already begun.


Enjoy your affogato.



Twitter @draigdun / Facebook / Google+

Friday, 8 November 2013

Eastgate: Nando's

[Unit 6. Eastgate]

Following the October 2012 launch of Eastgate Odeon and Costa, a second wave of openings in December brought Nando's to West Wales for the first time. The global chain of Mozambican-Portuguese style restaurants, which has its roots in South Africa, signed a lease for an Eastgate branch in July 2012 and opened on 19th December 2012.
It was announced that the new restaurant would create 30 jobs in Llanelli. In order of proximity to Llanelli, other Nando's establishments in Wales include those in Swansea, Merthyr Tydfil, Nantgarw, three restaurants in Cardiff, and another in Wrexham.


The chain is renowned for its rapid expansion across the UK. By securing the implied celebrity endorsements of prominent figures in their hometowns, Nando's has successfully forged a reputation of being a cut above other casual dining establishments. This strategy, which entails providing free food to VIPs (sometimes by granting a lifetime of free dining with the 'black card'), helped garner attention on opening day at Eastgate, when members from the Scarlets were invited as the first official customers. Support for Nando's has also been expressed by Felinfoel-born athlete Dai Greene around the time of its launch.

Located on the ground floor of the Harmonica building, the restaurant shopfront is only one third the width of the Scarlets' Red Room situated opposite, but the Nando's brand carries sufficient weight to ensure a strong commercial presence in the area. The restaurant can cater for up to 120 customers and, like Hungry Horse, spans the full length of the the building. Facing the Eastgate car park at the front of the building is an unwelcoming rear fire exit/staff entrance squeezed alongside the boarded-up fronts of two unoccupied units (at least there is some kind of signage on this more exposed side of the eatery). A small area for outdoor seating is available around the main entrance which is also wheelchair accessible. As well as easy access from the car park, Nando's is just a few paces away from the bus interchange and taxi drop-off zone.

According to TripAdvisor reviewers, Nando's staff are always helpful, but beyond the provision of menus there is no table service: using a 'help yourself' service, customers must place orders at the till. Service is commended as being quick and polite and the restaurant and kitchen as a whole are considered clean with a pleasant traditional Portuguese-Mozambican atmosphere.

In March 2013, the Eastgate Nando's received a FSA Food Hygiene Rating of '5 (Very Good)'.

The choice and quality of food, notably its famed peri-peri chicken, in the Eastgate branch lives up to its global reputation. But despite catering for families, and regardless of any athletes' endorsements, Nando's isn't the healthiest place to take children to eat (in 2006, an average Nando's meal was found to contain eight teaspoons of added sugar while deficent in calcium, iron, zinc and folate). And although the chain boasts a Red Tractor assurance accreditation, that scheme - which ensures compliance with minimum legislative requirements - does not prevent inadequate welfare for Nando's chickens.



Since its arrival at Eastgate, Nando's has led a sustained local marketing campaign, much of which is exhibited on the Facebook page. And as if the chain needed any help in its promotions, an independent website dedicated to indexing every Nando's in the world encourages people to share their views on the Eastgate Nando's (hats off to Ryan for travelling down to Llanelli in May 2013 as part of his marinated chicken marathon!)


Nando's current opening hours are:
(Monday - Thursday) 10:00 - 22:00
(Friday & Saturday) 10:00 - 22:30
(Sunday) 11:00 - 22:00

A take-away service is also available on 01554 751 818



Official Nando's website: www.nandos.co.uk/restaurant/llanelli

Nando's Llanelli on Facebook: www.facebook.com/nandosllanelli






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