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Retail & Consumer

Inside Lush: We took a tour of the cosmetics retailer's º£½ÇÊÓÆµ HQ and this is what we discovered

The company's finance director Kim Coles spoke to Business Live about Covid, the environment and international expansion

Business Live's South West editor, Hannah, has a go at making bath bombs(Image: Hannah Baker)

If Willy Wonka owned a factory in Britain in 2021, it would probably be Lush’s Dorset HQ.

From the outside, it would be easy to walk past the grey warehouse building on the typical-looking industrial estate in Poole.

It is a dank, wet summer’s day when I step through the doors of the cosmetic company’s º£½ÇÊÓÆµ head office and I am immediately greeted with the aroma of lemon.

Just like Charlie Bucket in Roald Dahl’s famous 1964 children’s book, I’m asked not to divulge any of Lush’s closely-guarded recipes before being taken onto the factory floor.

Entering the (self-named) ‘Fresh’ section of the factory, where many of Lush’s soaps, face masks and body rubs are made, is like stepping into some sort of kitchen-turned- apothecary shop.

There are fruit and vegetables piled up on stainless steel counters; large glass jars full of powders - from turmeric, to lavender to polenta - lining the walls; and vast metal vats of what look like green and brown butter icing being stirred by hand.

Work here starts at 6am with a delivery of fresh fruit, flowers and vegetables - and the products (all natural and handmade) have a shelf life of just one month.

After trying my hand at filling some pots with a deliciously scented face mask (it's hard to believe it’s not edible), I am taken over to the bath bomb building. Here, the magic of Christmas is already in the air.