February 22, 2013
- Britain's first pop-up squah shop has opened in Manchester’s Corn
Exchange, making use of redundant retail space to create a temporary
high street sports centre.
The ‘squash shop’ concept is being rolled out across the UK by England
Squash & Racketball as part of The Big Hit campaign which engages
the public with these sports. In Manchester, an empty retail unit
sandwiched between two of the high streets leading fashion retail
brands has been transformed into an open squash facility and proved an
instant hit with shoppers.
“We feel that empty shops can be put to better use for the community by
using them as a temporary squash shops,” said Steve Amos, Head of
National Network at ESR. “Working with retail management to make them
available and staffed by our regional coaching team, we want consumers
to walk out of a clothing store and straight in to a squash shop for a
quick taster session and to learn the fun and health benefits that you
can have with a squash racket and a ball.
There are more than two-thousand clubs with squash courts in the
country and more than half a million people play squash every week in
Britain, Whilst the sport peaked at almost double that in the mid
1980’s and the sport hopes that its bid for Olympic status in 2020 will
continue the increase in participation that it has enjoyed in recent
years.
Launching the first squash shop in Manchester was Britain’s top female
player Laura Massaro, the world number 3 from Lancashire thinks the
squash shop is a great way to get the public playing; "I think it’s a
great idea. Squash is the perfect sport to put in the 'shop window' and
because we play on courts not much bigger than this shop, the
experience for shoppers to pick up a racket and have a go, gives them a
real feel for how much fun the game can be. There is so much
redundant retail space on Britain’s high streets, that making good use
of it to get the public playing a sport like squash is so blindingly
simple. The Big Hit should be a big success."