Cancer Research UK, opens its 21st UK Superstore in Cardiff

Cancer Research Uk opens its 21st Superstore in the UK at City Link Retail Park in Cardiff.

There was excitement all around as this huge store opened its doors to the public, it also has the added benefit of being a discount store packed with all manner of bargains.

4 City Link Retail Park, Cardiff, CF24 1PQ,  019 2045 4476

Check out the tube video

https://youtu.be/8hBMQw6Wv7c

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SIX-YEAR-OLD CANCER SURVIVOR OPENS CANCER RESEARCH UK’S LARGEST STORE IN WALES

CANCER Research UK’s Cardiff superstore was officially opened by a brave six-year-old cancer survivor yesterday (Thursday 21 February).

The superstore is the biggest Cancer Research UK shop in Wales and the charity’s second-largest store in the UK.

For an interactive 360 degrees browse of the shop click here: https://youtu.be/8hBMQw6Wv7c

Located on Newport Road, the 8,000sq ft store is more than eight times the size of a traditional Cancer Research UK shop and all the profits will fund the charity’s life-saving research.

Darcy Stone from Rhiwbina was delighted to be asked to open the store as shopping is one of her favourite hobbies, alongside playing football and dancing.

 

Her mum, Ruth, a playworker for Cardiff Council, said Darcy’s diagnosis was a huge shock for the family.  “Darcy was diagnosed two weeks before her third birthday,” said Ruth.  “We had been camping in the May half term and that’s when I noticed a lump on the side of her body. “She had to have a scan at Noah’s Ark Hospital to check the lump and that’s when we were told it was Wilms tumour.”

Wilms tumour is a type of kidney cancer that mainly affects children. Around 85 children are diagnosed with a Wilms’ tumour each year in the UK. *

Ruth, 41, said: “It was a very big whirlwind for us.  “Apart from the lump on her side, Darcy didn’t have any symptoms at all.  “It was very surreal. We had a healthy child one week, and a week later she was having chemo.”

Darcy, a pupil at Rhiwbina Primary School, had surgery to remove the kidney containing the 10cm tumour before having five weeks of chemotherapy.

Darcy needed a scan every three months to check the cancer hadn’t returned to her remaining kidney. Thankfully, the scans have recently come to an end as Darcy has now been cancer-free for more than three years.  Ruth said: “Darcy was so amazing throughout all her treatment. I think she found losing her hair the hardest part.

“I sometimes feel the parents deal with it worse than the children who are so resilient. For Darcy, she was young enough that she has thankfully forgotten a lot of what she went through. We met so many other brave children on the cancer ward.”

Opening the store is especially poignant for the family due to the progress research has made to kidney cancer treatment.

“If Darcy had been born 30 years ago the outcome may have been very different,” said Ruth. “If we can fund more research, even more lives like Darcy’s will be saved as a result.”          

Queues of people were entertained by a choir from Moorland Primary School before Darcy cut the ribbon alongside mum Ruth, her dad, Ian, and her older brother Dylan.

Cancer survival in the UK has doubled since the 1970s and Cancer Research UK’s work has been at the heart of that progress. But more funds and supporters are needed to bring forward the day when all cancers are cured.

The store, in City Link Retail Park, has a huge selection of items at discount. Clothing, homeware, books, toys, and electrical goods are all priced at £3 or less, with higher value items – such as furniture – identified with a golden ticket.

Every day around 52 people are diagnosed with cancer in Wales*. Money raised from the store will go towards funding Cancer Research UK’s work to help more men, women, and children survive the disease.

Cancer Research UK spends around £4 million a year in Wales on some of the UK’s leading scientific and clinical research.

The shop is open Monday to Friday, 9.30 am until 6.30 pm, Saturdays 9 am until 6 pm and Sundays 10 am to 4 pm. It is currently taking collections for World Cancer Day and is seeking donations of good-quality clothes, shoes, bags, books, and homeware. Each bag of donated clothes is worth up to £25 – even more if supporters sign up for Gift Aid. 

Volunteers are needed to help run the new Cardiff superstore. Flexible hours are available, and anyone interested in volunteering is invited to call into the shop to find out more. 

To find out more about Cancer Research UK’s shops, visit www.cancerresearchuk/shop

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