Community Shop, the UK’s first social supermarket, hosted Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Edinburgh at the Lambeth store. During the visit, The Duchess witnessed first-hand Community Shop’s transformative work tackling the root cause of food insecurity by providing members with a hand up, not a hand-out.
Community Shop, the award-winning social enterprise arm of the UK’s leading surplus redistributor Company Shop Group, operates 13 stores nationwide supporting areas of social inequality in the UK. Through its unique model, Community Shop sells surplus products donated by food industry partners at a deeply discounted price, ensuring that products don’t needlessly go to waste, whilst simultaneously providing a sustainable support model for thousands of families each year.
The Duchess of Edinburgh is patron to over 70 charities and organisations focusing on food production, women’s empowerment, eye health and disability support. During the COVID-19 pandemic, The Duchess of Edinburgh volunteered with a number of local food banks and supported NHS care workers. During today’s visit to Community Shop, Her Royal Highness participated in community activities, helped to serve the store’s “Feast Day” and toured the site whilst speaking to Community Shop team and members, and hearing the positive impact Community Shop has on them and the wider community.
During a tour of Community Shop, The Duchess of Edinburgh explored the three interconnected spaces of the site: Community Store, Community Hub, and Community Kitchen. Community Stores provide members with a much-needed access to deeply discounted food and essentials, including fruit, vegetables and bread for only 20p. The profits from Community Store are reinvested into the Community Hub, which delivers holistic support programmes to empower individuals to develop their own capabilities and deliver a positive future for themselves. Additionally, each Community Shop features a Community Kitchen, a café that allows people to connect with others and learn through food, as well as providing home-cooked meals for the community with kids eating free every day. People join on a membership basis and is open to those on means-tested benefits and who live in the local area.