From bleak to bustling: how one French town beat the high street blues http://bit.ly/2Emxu6J Angelique Chrisafis in Mulhouse Mulhouse has turned around its image and now boasts more shops opening than closing, thanks to smart planning, investment and community efforts On a lane in what was once considered eastern France’s grimmest town, a street artist is up a ladder finishing a mural, the independent bookshop has a queue at the till, the organic cooperative is full of customers and Séverine Liebold’s arty independent tea shop is doing a brisk trade. When Liebold opened Tilvist in Mulhouse three years ago, in a space that had been vacant for years, friends tried to persuade her against it. “They said: ‘Not Mulhouse, look elsewhere,’” she recalls. “But I stuck with my instinct, and I was right.” Continue reading... https://ift.tt/eA8V8J May 20, 2019 at 07:00AM - news

الاثنين، 20 مايو 2019

From bleak to bustling: how one French town beat the high street blues http://bit.ly/2Emxu6J Angelique Chrisafis in Mulhouse Mulhouse has turned around its image and now boasts more shops opening than closing, thanks to smart planning, investment and community efforts On a lane in what was once considered eastern France’s grimmest town, a street artist is up a ladder finishing a mural, the independent bookshop has a queue at the till, the organic cooperative is full of customers and Séverine Liebold’s arty independent tea shop is doing a brisk trade. When Liebold opened Tilvist in Mulhouse three years ago, in a space that had been vacant for years, friends tried to persuade her against it. “They said: ‘Not Mulhouse, look elsewhere,’” she recalls. “But I stuck with my instinct, and I was right.” Continue reading... https://ift.tt/eA8V8J May 20, 2019 at 07:00AM

Mulhouse has turned around its image and now boasts more shops opening than closing, thanks to smart planning, investment and community efforts

On a lane in what was once considered eastern France’s grimmest town, a street artist is up a ladder finishing a mural, the independent bookshop has a queue at the till, the organic cooperative is full of customers and Séverine Liebold’s arty independent tea shop is doing a brisk trade.

When Liebold opened Tilvist in Mulhouse three years ago, in a space that had been vacant for years, friends tried to persuade her against it. “They said: ‘Not Mulhouse, look elsewhere,’” she recalls. “But I stuck with my instinct, and I was right.”

Continue reading...

from The Guardian http://bit.ly/2Emxu6J

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