When are the markets held?
Rhiwbina
When: Fridays 10am – 1pm
Where: Butchers Arms CF14 6NB
Roath
When: Saturdays 9.30am – 1pm
Where: The Mackintosh CF24 3JW, opposite the Gate Arts Centre
Riverside
When: Sundays 10am – 2pm
Where: Opposite the Millennium Stadium
RMCA evening market
When: Held four or five times a year, and they’re looking to hold another in the lead up to the Christmas period.
Mini street food
When: Look out for their mini street food event which is held at the Cardiff University open days.
Contact for more details: http://www.riversidemarket.org.uk/
Learn more about the Sustainable Food Cities programme:
The Sustainable Food Cities Network helps people and places to share challenges, explore practical solutions and develop best practice in all aspects of healthy and sustainable food.
Sustainable Food Cities programmes work across six key areas:
Promoting healthy and sustainable food to the public
Tackling food poverty, diet-related ill health and access to affordable healthy food
Building community food knowledge, skills, resources and projects
Promoting a vibrant and diverse sustainable food economy
Transforming catering and food procurement
Reducing waste and the ecological footprint of the food system
For more information about Sustainable Food Cities visit: www.sustainablefoodcities.org
Twitter follow: @foodcities
Riverside, Roath and Rhiwbina, famous for their weekly farmers markets, only sell produce you’ve grown, raised or made yourself. Passionate about selling local produce, their now expanding to the world of evening street food.
Operated by the Riverside Community Markets Association, (RCMA) Cardiff residents have flocked to the weekly markets since the groups founding in 1998 and it remains just as popular today. This year, up to five evening street food markets have taken place, with the next one due take place before the festive period.
Steve Garrett, founder of the RCMA said: “The evening street food market is the spin-off for the original idea. It’s a movement for people preferring the pop up model.” He hopes that by promoting good quality food with a lower price, the evening street market will appeal to a wider demographic.
Not only have the markets brought communities together over the past 17 years, local residents have benefited from both knowledge and having the luxury of local and affordable food produce on their doorstep. Aiming to reduce ‘food poverty’ in South Riverside, the RCMA Community Food Coordinator teaches residents how to grow their own food in the community.
Supporting local businesses and aiming to give producers the opportunity to trade directly with the public is key. You’ll be sure to find the freshest, healthiest food available, which is better environment and supports the local economy. Steve said: “Once you’ve tasted something fresh and local, you never go back.”
With increasing awareness, food sustainability is a vehicle for positive change, with programmes such as the Sustainable Food Cities Programme. They support food work in six cities, Cardiff one of them. Food Cardiff is the first of four cities to be awarded Sustainable Food City status and is focusing on delivering the Beyond the Foodbank Campaign. Katie Palmer from Food Cardiff explains its goal is to ensure access to “good food.”
Below, the founder Steve Garrett explains what makes the Riverside markets so special.
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When are the markets held?
Rhiwbina
When: Fridays 10am – 1pm
Where: Butchers Arms CF14 6NB
Roath
When: Saturdays 9.30am – 1pm
Where: The Mackintosh CF24 3JW, opposite the Gate Arts Centre
Riverside
When: Sundays 10am – 2pm
Where: Opposite the Millennium Stadium
RMCA evening market
When: Held four or five times a year, and they’re looking to hold another in the lead up to the Christmas period.
Mini street food
When: Look out for their mini street food event which is held at the Cardiff University open days.
Contact for more details: http://www.riversidemarket.org.uk/
Learn more about the Sustainable Food Cities programme:
The Sustainable Food Cities Network helps people and places to share challenges, explore practical solutions and develop best practice in all aspects of healthy and sustainable food.
Sustainable Food Cities programmes work across six key areas:
Promoting healthy and sustainable food to the public
Tackling food poverty, diet-related ill health and access to affordable healthy food
Building community food knowledge, skills, resources and projects
Promoting a vibrant and diverse sustainable food economy
Transforming catering and food procurement
Reducing waste and the ecological footprint of the food system
For more information about Sustainable Food Cities visit: www.sustainablefoodcities.org
Twitter follow: @foodcities