Last week, we made the twice-yearly penance trip to Clark's Village. Clark's Village is the kind of place loved by shopaholics. An "outlet" through which the big high street names offer end of line items and overstock at significant discounts, the place is very popular. This Murphy, however, ... Read review
Advantages: Lots of shops, genuine discounts, heaven for those who like shopping. Disadvantages: Crowded, slightly off the beaten track, foul food emporiums.
Last week, we made the twice-yearly penance trip to Clark's Village. Clark's Village is the kind of place loved by shopaholics. An "outlet" through which the big high street names offer end of line items and overstock at significant discounts, the place is very popular. This Murphy, however, hates shopping intensely, so for me a trip to Clark's Village is a penance, but a necessary one.
Clark's Village is in Street, ... ...you will have no trouble finding it. It is well signposted by those brown "attraction" signs from most directions and is very easy to locate if you arrive via the M5 leave at J23 and well follow the signs. It will take about ten minutes to get there once you are off the motorway. From the M4 it is J18 or J19, depending on the direction from which you are coming, onto the A39 and again follow those brown signs. Try not to go on Saturdays ... more
Last week, we made the twice-yearly penance trip to Clark's Village. Clark's Village is the kind of place loved by shopaholics. An "outlet" through which the big high street names offer end of line items and overstock at significant discounts, the place is very popular. This Murphy, however, hates shopping intensely, so for me a trip to Clark's Village is a penance, but a necessary one.
Clark's Village is in Street, Somerset. If you live within an hour's drive of Street, you will have no trouble finding it. It is well signposted by those brown "attraction" signs from most directions and is very easy to locate if you arrive via the M5 leave at J23 and well follow the signs. It will take about ten minutes to get there once you are off the motorway. From the M4 it is J18 or J19, depending on the direction from which you are coming, onto the A39 and again follow those brown signs. Try not to go on Saturdays in high summer season, for you are sure to spend hours behind caravans. An hour's drive can easily turn into two or more hours at peak times in this part of the West Country. I know this to my cost!
We went on a Sunday. I choose Sunday mornings, as soon as the village is open, for it seems to be the least busy time and I cannot bear crowded shops. (Late night shopping until 8pm on Thursdays is ok in the winter, but busy as hell in the summer). I like to arrive as early as possible, at 10am. However, Sunday trading regulations mean that not all the outlets open at that time. Any store over 3,000 square feet there are half a dozen or so of these cannot open until 10.30am and cannot actually sell anything until 11am. You might find this irritating, but I like it. I dash around the smaller shops I need to visit while they are still empty no browsing for Murphys! and am ready to look at the bigger shops just as they open and while they are still empty. Sunday trading laws are ridiculous though.
The main reason for my penance shopping trips to Clark's Village is to buy shoes for my children. The place started out as a single Clark's Shoes factory shop and the mall has grown from there. The Clark's outlet is the largest there, and it offers big discounts on a wide range of their shoes not just the ends of lines. Children's shoes sell at a minimum of 30% off high street price; shoes that retail between £30 and £40 per pair, are generally reduced to around the £20 mark. Ends of line shoes are even cheaper. I paid £15 for Conor and Kieran's autumn term school shoes and £10 for trainers. This was a 60% discount; better prices than I could find anywhere, even at sale times. It is important to get well-made, properly fitted shoes for growing feet and if I bought nothing else at Clark's Village, the trip would be worth it for children's shoes alone. Those items with the biggest reductions may not be available in every size, but the standard reductions seem to cover everyone. Adult shoes are there in plenty and I bought myself a pair of fifty quid walking shoes for £15. The usual Clark's fitting service is available too, although I would advise doing all this before you go, as there are often large queues. The Clark's outlet is definitely the best one in the mall!
There are many more shops here; about eighty, I think. The largest of these are Marks and Spencer and Next, both exceedingly popular and always crowded to an extent that makes me claustrophobic. If you do not mind busy hotness and crowds though, there are also excellent reductions and ranges from which to choose at both places. Next in particular, carry an enormous amount of stock at less than half their high street prices. The merchandising is a mess, everything is higgledy-piggledy and you need the patience to search patience I do not have, I far prefer the genteel quiet of my local Oxfam shop but if you have the patience, you will reap the rewards in terms of bargains.
The majority of the remaining outlets are devoted to clothes. The fashion-conscious will find Calvin Klein, Pilot, Benetton and designer outlets like Prima. The ladeez looking for something to wear to a function will find the likes of Alexon, Windsmoor and Jaeger. There are also many big names in sport and casual wear Levi, Ben Sherman, Lee Cooper, CAT, Adidas and erm yes, people like that. As I buy most of my clothes from charity shops trying to avoid the sweatshops y'see I can't really vouch for how wonderful these places are or the bargains to be had, but they are always jolly busy and the tills always seem to be doing a roaring trade. I can tell you that 501s in SOME sizes were on sale at the Levis shop for a tenner. Each shop has a board outside, advertising the kinds of lines they do whether sale items, overstocks, end of lines etc and by how much you can expect to see the stock reduced.
There are also a number of homeware shops, and this is another reason I go to Clark's Village. I have a thing for pots and pans and there are always great bargains. This time around, I just had to have a le Creuset casserole dish at half its list price and a good third cheaper than even the cheapest place I have seen it on sale. There is a Royal Worcester outlet, a Villeroy and Boche and several other purveyors of good quality kitchenware. Canteens of cutlery from the Oneida shop are always great value. Oh, and there is a Sony outlet, too. This has small reductions you could probably find similar by shopping online but it does have a range of very cheap re-conditioned items with a full year's warranty. There was a computer there this last time that tempted me greatly! Um there's a Cadbury's factory shop AND a Thornton's factory shop. I, of course, spent money in both! You can find the full round up of stores at the Clark's Village website, URL at the end.
The Clark's Village experience is pretty much a horrible one for an anti-shopper like me. It is ALWAYS busy, often horribly crowded. However, as "malls" go, it is better than many. There are gazillions of shops, and they are all recognised brand names. Savings are genuine in most places, unlike many of these types of discount centres where you would not give houseroom to half the tat they are trying to sell. The architecture is hideous: all fake Victorian and er well tacky. However, it is not as hideous as many. It is open air one imagines they were going for the olde-worlde village effect, it being Clark's Village an' all and this makes it seem less crowded and claustrophobic. They have made an effort with bench seating and flowerbeds and that kind of thing. If it is raining, you will not get soaked because there are wide awnings down each "street" allowing for probably four people across. There are plenty of loos and they are always spotless. There are four car parks and plenty of spaces, so even at busy times you do not crawl around and around looking for somewhere to put the car. Three hours parking is a pound hardly extortionate at current standards.
The food is mostly dire and expensive. Take my advice and do not eat in the Food Factory, the largest place with about four different eateries and a central eating area. It is horrid in there expensive, nasty food; hot and sticky; sullen, stupid staff. There is a Starbucks and there are a few stalls selling paninis or baked potatoes, so if it were a sunny day when you visit, I would choose one of these outdoor stalls and sit on one of the benches. They are cheaper and the food is better.
Clark's Village caters for both children and the disabled better than do many other designer outlets. The baby changing rooms are spacious and clean. For older children there is a carousel and a super adventure playground not a token slide or two at all that will keep most kids occupied for at least an hour, while parents take it in turns to watch. There is also a soft play emporium where you can pay a couple of quid to distract them for another hour. We used this once, and while my two had a great time, the adventure playground has enough in the way of entertainment value to break up a morning's shopping for them, so it really was not necessary to spend the money. Clark's Village runs a Shopmobility scheme, which you can book in advance. Wheelchair users will find it a happier place to shop than many for just about the entire place is on ground floor level with no steps up to any shops. Some of the smaller outlets are packed to bursting with stock though, leaving little room for a wheelchair. This is not the fault of the village itself and the majority of places have plenty of room for a disabled person to be able to browse.
Um yes. That's Clark's Village for you. It is full of shops. It is full of discounts. It is full to bursting with people bargain hunting. In short, to me, it is a horrible, horrible place. However, last week, I spent just over a hundred pounds and saved well over another hundred pounds on high street prices for some high quality goods.
Grudgingly, my little consumerists, I recommend it to you.
April to October: 9.00am 6.00pm November to March: 9.00am 5.30pm Thursday all year: Late Night Shopping til 8.00pm Sunday all year: 10.00am 5.00pm Christmas Day & Easter Sunday: Closed
Advantages: Savings galore, Quality items Disadvantages: American Mall atmosphere/ Avoid peak times/ Food is awful
I’m not really a shopping fan, These days I find the whole experience a bit traumatic if I was being honest. Rude people everywhere you look, pushed from pillar to post, robbed right, left and centre from the car park fees to the overpriced so-called ‘bargains’ themselves. This is why (and I guess others if you believe newspaper reports) I do a lot of my shopping on the internet. However I must admit that I make exceptions wherever ... ...Village in Somerset. This place has a whole abundance of genuine bargains and even though on the occasions I have visited, I have spent quite a lot of money, I have been mightily pleased with the savings I have made too. Here’s a little more about Clark’s Village and how it came to start in the first place ;
Clark’s Village is located in Street, a little town in Somerset. Close by Street is Glastonbury famous for its Tor and connections ...
WormThatTurned 13.09.2004
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Clarks Village
Advantages: Savings on lots of goodies Disadvantages: A long way to travel if you don't live locally
...years since we had visited Clarks Village which is based at Street, Somerset. I had looked at Clarks site on the web and noticed it was open on Boxing Day. Hubby said we should go as Boxing Day is usually a dull day (we spent Christmas Day with my daughter and her family).
Boxing Day came and we duly got up and, even though the weather was pretty miserable, we decided to go. Hubby said "you know where to go then" to which I replied "of course, we've ... ...but was there one for Clarks Village, Street? No, no and no.
"I thought you knew the bloody way" he said.
"So did I" said I.
Car stopped - looked in the boot for the 1998(!) Atlas road map. Found Yeovil and Street. Told hubby where to go (to Street, I mean, what else did you think?). We had to follow the A37 for a while then go on to a minor road B3151. Once we were on the B3151 all my hubby could say was "this road can't be right - it's too much ...
Wearsidelass 01.01.2004
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Clarks Village
Advantages: Many High street "Names" all at discount prices. Disadvantages: No creche facilities for husbands
...well, here goes…….
The Clarks Village is a Factory Outlet Centre, in Street, Somerset. Never heard of Street? Think Glastonbury, and shift down the map a bit. Situated on land that used to be doing something really useful, i.e. making shoes, Clarks decided to make a totally different use of it, and sell things that aren’t made there any more. Them and several dozen other retailers, that is.
First impressions were mixed, bearing ... ...into anywhere like this (“Has it got a hi-fi or computer shop?” “No? Well I’ll sit in the car then!”). The front car-park, which is a council one must be paid for, which was a bit cheeky, I thought. Being the season of mellow fruitfulness (and leaf-blocked drains), this resembled a lake rather than tarmac in places. The entrance would do justice to a theme park, with a Shopmobility office in the gate-house and electric ...
BNibbles 08.10.2001
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Clarks Village
Advantages: Lots of cheap designer shops Disadvantages: Parking & runs out of popular sizes quick
...and my mum headed to Clarks Village in Street Somerset a few times and back then Clarks Village was not that big and didn't have very many good shops but recently a friend mentioned that he went and recommended that we take a look, so one Saturday we took a trip there and was amazed at what we saw. I would say that it had at least tripled in size since I was last there and the quality of the shops was also a massive improvement. There are many more ... ...Now whenever I visit Clarks Village I always spend a fortune but instead of only getting one or two items for my money (like when I shop in the high street) I come back with bags and bags of stuff and most of it is designer gear. There are a couple of down points to Clarks Village though, one would be the parking, unless you head up there early (before 10am) you will struggle to get parked especially when its holiday season, there are a few massive ...
soutram 29.04.2009
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Clarks Village
Advantages: Lots of discount shops on one site Disadvantages: But not always as cheap as you might hope
...bargains, particularly shoes in the Clarks factory outlet and misshapen choccies in Cadburys. But then, we have been on days when we have found nothing we like in the shoe shop and Cadburys have run out of their misshapes. Oh woe!
But hey, there's load of other shops plying their discounted wares and if you want designer labels but don't mind last season's fashions, then you really must have a browse here - Alexon, Benetton, Wrangler, Jaeger, Gottard, ... ...sure you look for the Clarks Village signs to get a bit nearer,
Having said that, though, the Street village itself has many good (normal High Street sort of ) shops. Don't ignore them: they somewhat unfairly lost trade to Clarks and have plenty of sales to make their shops competitive.
Have a good day! ...
griffiti 29.01.2004
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Advantages: Good deals, good coffee Disadvantages: Limited time before stock is changed.
When I first wrote this opinion, I penned those immortal words
?This is a VERY rare occurrence for me ? writing about a retail outlet, and hot on the heels of my ClarksVillage op too, whatever next? Is our hero weakening or is he a closet shopper. No, I?m just weakening due to plummeting caffeine levels!?
So take it from me that?s it?s even more rare, possibly on a par with bears vacating the woodlands just to pooh, that I?d bother updating a retail opinion.
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Advantages: They stock shoes for big sizes Disadvantages: They are expensive
One of my biggest problems in life is finding shoes that will fit me, that aren’t ugly, clumsy and unflattering. I have wide, size 8 feet with a very high instep. Shopping for decent looking footwear that is comfortable for me, can be a fruitless, frustrating search with nothing to show for it at the end of the day.
Clarks is a company that until a few years ago, I did not associate with fashion and style. However at my wits end one day, I decided to take a look inside and see what was on offer. Since that day I have never looked back and I always take a look inside when it is time to buy a new pair of shoes.
~~ The Clarks Company ~~
Clarks started off in 1825, as a sheepskin business in the village of Street in Somerset. In 1830 the first shoes produced were sheepskin slippers. Today the company owns 500 shops ...