Top Ten Cafes to Visit With Kids in Bristol

As any reader of this blog, or person that knows me in real life (I know, can you believe real life people still exist?) will be aware, I love to go to cafes with Piglet.  There’s nothing better than sitting back, relaxing and enjoying a warm latte and a slice of cake while Piglet wrecks the joint by squirting yoghurt across the table and flinging Pom Pom Bears at unsuspecting fellow patrons.  So in honour of our love for all things caffeine-fuelled, I present to you a list of some of our favourite cafes in Bristol, so that should you find yourself in the city of Brunel, Banksy and eco-warriors in tie-dye, you will know exactly where you should be caking it up.  So, in no particular order, here goes.  You’re welcome.

  1. Venue 35

Tucked away in a suburban area of North West Bristol that you are frankly unlikely to be visiting unless you are lucky enough to know people middle class enough to live in its immediate surrounding area, lies Venue 35, a large cafe which looks more like a bar from the front (and serves alcohol) but deceptively doesn’t seem to open at night.  Piglet and I have spent many happy hours in here, mostly with me trying to down my coffee before he wakes up and has a meltdown, but it was only recently that I discovered that they have a whole other room out the back-a room dedicated to families, with a selection of toys and a play area for the children, leading out to a terrace at the back.  No more would I have to chase Piglet out of the front door as he runs out into the rain for the sixtieth time.  No more would I have to do an emergency breastfeed before he launches into full meltdown and ruins everyone’s quiet Sunday brunch.  There is a room for actual children!  With toys!

2. (Grupo) Lounge

There are several branches of the Lounge chain in Bristol, including one in yummy mummies’ paradise North Street in Bedminster (a place I sometimes go to, and walk up and down with the pushchair, pretending I live there), but the one we visit most frequently is Grupo Lounge in Westbury-on-Trym.  Located just a ten minute walk from the aforementioned Venue 35, Grupo is the King and Queen of all suburban cafes.  Huge, packed to the rafters with buggies, and rocking a fabulous selection of lampshades and paintings your nan had on her wall, it is always full of children, which means it won’t be too embarrassing when the toddler kicks off, as countless others will be no doubt doing the same.  Or maybe they’ll just be sat nicely eating their children’s meals, as they usually are when we go there, while my own offspring charges about carrying crayons and entire games of Connect 4 to grace the table while we eat.  Either way, there is a toy selection which Piglet loves transporting across the room (admittedly putting it in next to the stairs isn’t necessarily the best location) and they sell tapas as well as a range of brunch dishes and the usual burgers, wraps, etc, and a children’s menu.

3. Kudacafe

Kudacafe Bristol cafe

If I could only have access to one cafe in this list to visit with my toddler, it would be this one.  If you are looking for the perfect cake, it’s probably not the place to go, but for toddlers, it’s unbeatable.  It’s basically an under-fives play area with a cafe attached.  Not really designed for older children, as there is no soft play and the toys are aimed squarely at pre-schoolers, but for toddlers and babies it is perfect.  Oh, and the kids’ food selection is great.  There is a 5 items for £2.50 deal and everything is baby-friendly-raisins, breadsticks, sandwiches that Piglet won’t eat but I understand that some children do; etc, etc.

4. Boston Tea Party

Once upon a time, long long ago, I was a teenager, and THE place to go when you were a sixth former was Boston Tea Party, a veritable Bristol institution on Park Street.  It probably still is, if you are sixteen, but the stairs render it out of bounds to most of the buggy brigade.  Luckily, these days there are more Boston Tea Parties.  They are literally popping up all over the place, and the one in Gloucester Road is both massive (perfect for finding a spot where the little ones won’t annoy other customers), and has a small selection of toys.

5. The Little Teapot

Most of the cafes in one-time village-turned-outer-suburb Shirehampton are of the mug of tea and bacon sarnie variety.  Which I’m sure are great for kids in their own way, but perhaps don’t offer the range of culinary treats I was hoping for.  However, recent addition The Little Teapot advertises itself as being a cafe for everyone, but with a little sweetener for parents in the form of a small enclosed play area for toddlers, and toys in the small garden at the back.  There is always a decent selection of cake, and plenty of child-friendly treats available for small ones, and its cosy size means that the little one will never be far away.

6. The Cafe on the Square

Cafe on the Square Bristol cafe

At one time, in the not so distant past, the bus stop slash public toilets on Sea Mills Square was famous for being a urine-soaked hell-hole that you had to stand in for up to 45 minutes at a time if it rained while you were unlucky enough to be waiting for the number 40 bus, reading such literary gems as “Gemma 4 Stu 4EVA” and other, less complimentary slogans.  However, several years ago someone came up with the genius idea of gentrifying it into an actual cafe, an idea that I admit I was somewhat sceptical about.  A cafe?  In a building that once housed the eating area for the world’s most unhygenic-looking kebab van that stood opposite like a dreary sentinel for Broken Britain?  Well, reader, I am converted.  And so is the bus stop.  The kebab van has long since departed, and the cafe shines like a beacon, calling the middle classes from miles around to partake of its very reasonably priced paninis, jacket potatoes and homemade cakes.  There is even a selection of books for children (including some brilliant Enid Blyton versions of Bible stories) and a Fun Five offer including Pom Bears, yoghurt and all the other toddler delicacies.  AND there’s a brand new park opposite.  It has literally become my second home.  I now propose that all bus stops start serving lattes and Victoria sponge.  The world would surely be a better place.

7. The Hungry Caterpillar

In the style of a belligerent London cabbie, I don’t do “South of the river.”  This has nothing to do with any kind of class-based distaste or fear of what might be lurking beyond the muddy banks of the Avon, and everything to do with the slightly inconvenient routes taken by public transport, meaning that a trip “over there” requires TWO buses.  However, upon hearing that things are nice over there; there are theatres, delis and artisan bread and coffee served by men with abundant beards who probably spend their spare time learning the lost art of Victorian masonry, I ventured over there to have a look.  It may have taken two buses, and one of those involved Piglet becoming engaged in a bizarre game of one-upmanship with an OAP who growled at him from across his zimmer frame, “That’s a nice toy car.  Not as nice as mine though,” before holding up an enormous remote-controlled car still in its box; but once there, we did find the Hungry Caterpillar waiting for us.  Unfortunately they had stopped serving food at 2pm, and we were still on a bus then, but we did manage to get some toast for Piglet and I was able to enjoy a latte on a comfortable sofa, whilst watching him play in the enormous play area.  Looks like I may have to brave the journey again.

8. The cafe at @Bristol

Well, it isn’t the quietest cafe on this list, but then the cafe at @Bristol (too many ats?) is attached to Bristol’s foremost (only) science museum (and a great place it is too) and located in Millennium Square, site of a) an enormous water feature where on summer days you cannot move for barefoot children running about and b) several carousels and one of those bungee trampoline thingys.  There’s plenty to do for kids of all ages here.  The selection of children’s food is second to none, and there is a small soft play area, although when we went it was mostly being commandeered by children older than Piglet, so we avoided.  Worth a look if you are in the City Centre, but if you are intending to go to the museum too, buy your ticket beforehand-we didn’t and then realised the ticket offered a discount for the cafe.

9. The cafe at Bristol Museum

bristol museum cafe

When I was a wee nipper Bristol Museum was mostly the home of stuffed animals, the occasional Roman coin and the amazing replica aeroplane hanging from the roof.  The sort of place where you could imagine an actual Night At The Museum, with the exhibits climbing out of their glass cases and wandering around.  Nowadays, it is still that, but with the addition of loads more stuff for kids (or maybe I just didn’t notice it before?) including an amazing play area for under 8s in the main atrium, next to the fantastic cafe, which serves salads, a fantastic selection of cake and the obligatory cheese rolls, plastic cups of cut grapes and Pom Bears.  Just don’t tell anyone that Piglet tried to climb on the 16th century fireplace at the back.

10. Cafe Nest, Mothercare Cribbs Causeway (website unavailable).

mothercare bristol cafe

My late grandmother believed that the pinnacle of sophistication was a “bit of dinner in BHS.”  She would, of course, have been heartbroken had she lived to see its undignified demise, but I am sure that she would have been heartened by the inclusion of a cafe in a shop to this list.  Probably.  If she had understood these here Interwebs.  Anyway, I was astonished to find this gem, tucked away at the back, not of John Lewis, where you might expect a fine dining experience, but Mothercare Cribbs Causeway.  Back in my day (1984) there was a Mothercare with a slide which had (brace yourselves children, for ye have not known such delight) TRAFFIC LIGHTS ON IT, so you could see when it was clear at the bottom.  Nowadays of course, times have changed, and although I cannot claim a traffic light (they turned the old Mothercare into an H&M, and for some reason didn’t keep the slide?) this here new one does have (wait for it) a soft play.  Yes, right next to the cafe.  Piglet could hardly contain his Pom Bears.  And they have the full range of Little Bird clothing too.  Ten out of ten Mothercare.  All is forgiven for the loss of those traffic lights.

And so concludes my happy list of fantastic cafes in the Bristol area.  There are others I haven’t included, I am sure.  Feel free to mention in comments if I have missed one of your faves.  As we say in Bristoland, GERT LUSH.

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28 Comments Add yours

  1. Emma says:

    Oooh after reading this, I want to go and find a cafe of my own. I am very jealous of the plethora of good cafes you have in the Bristol area. and all child friendly! Jersey needs to take note! With regards to BHS sad times indeed and I too used to demand that we go there for lunch as a kid. It was the days before M&S had branched into cafes. It was always a real treat when she gave in for an easy life!

    1. Min says:

      Yes, we are very much spoilt for choice here, which is great. Ha, good ol’ BHS! Can’t say I’ve been in there in the last 25 years though…

  2. I love The Little Tea Pot! I so miss Bristol! We always go there before as a family but since my family is no longer happening visits there are getting less and less. This is such a lovely read. Will try to go to the other cafes when we finally get a chance to visit again =) #dreamteam

    1. Min says:

      Sorry to hear that. I’m impressed that you know the Little Teapot. I would have thought it was the least well known of all of them! Thanks for commenting.

  3. This is a fab idea and would love to visit Bristol again now that I have Emma in tow…I’ve been quite a few times before and loved the city. I find it hard to know the toddler friendly cafes in Brighton so this is a great list to have to hand for visitors. Thanks for linking up to #dreamteam xx

    1. Min says:

      Glad to hear you’re a Bristol fan, and hope to see you here soon! Thanks for hosting and commenting. x

  4. Oh I remember BHS so well… used to go there as a child and also sneak in when I worked in London and was in need of a bit of ‘comfort food’! We are lucky to have some ace cafes here but I miss Bristol – used to visit a friend there when we were in our twenties. SOOOO long ago… #KCACOLS

    1. Min says:

      Ah, you should come again! It’s so much better now! Thanks for commenting.

  5. These all sound so lovely. I have four girls under nine including twin two year olds….so basically nowhere is really fun for me.

    Hopefully someday I will be able to enjoy little places like the ones above.

    1. Min says:

      Oh wow that sounds like hard work! Thanks for commenting.

  6. Sunita says:

    Such a cool post. I’ll be hating this with my cousin mama crew in Bristol . I still find it hard to find toddler friendly cafes in London. They just don’t have the space. I’m just writing my post on travelling to Berlin with little ones. Their kindercafes out there are incredible! Plus the food for grown ups is great too. #KCACOLS

    1. Min says:

      Yes-I used to live in London and there never seemed to be anywhere toddler friendly. I will definitely check out the kindercafes if I visit Berlin anytime soon. Thanks for commenting!

  7. I’m often in Bristol as it’s kind of a halfway point between my family and my auntie, so this is really useful! I love the sound of Kudacafe – anywhere where I can get some peace to sip a latte in peace is good with me! Liking the sound of the Bristol Museum too. And I seriously think H&M missed a trick not keeping that slide – I’d be all over that! Thanks so much for linking up at #KCACOLS. Hope you come back again next Sunday

    1. Min says:

      Haha, yes I’d totally be in there all the time as well! Kudacafe is great-it’s perfect for toddlers as it’s perfectly set up for 0-4 year olds.

  8. Oooo you’ve inspired me to find some local cafe’s, we’ve never really ventured further than our local Costa! I’ll keep these in mind if we ever visit Bristol 🙂 x #KCACOLS

    1. Min says:

      There’s definitely a lot better than Costa out there (no offence Costa if you’re reading, I love you but your cakes aren’t the best. Just a bit of honest feedback there, from me to you). Thanks for commenting!

  9. as someone who lives close to Bristol, this is a great round up post! we don’t come into the city too often but when we do, we love it 🙂 I know what you mean about the Boston tea Party on parkstreet!! #KCACOLS

    1. Min says:

      Glad to be of service! Yes, BTP on Park Street a nightmare for buggies, but now they have some other branches that are more buggy friendly it’s much better.

  10. Claire says:

    Love the sound of the cafes with soft play! #foodiefriday

  11. Ky says:

    Oh what a great list. We haven’t been to Bristol for a while, not since we’ve had Clem actually. We have friends who live there now so next time we visit I know places we could visit. Love Boston Tea Party, theres one in Exeter and Barnstaple that we visit quite a lot.x #foodiefriday

    1. Min says:

      Ooh BTP are branching out! I didn’t know there were any outside Bristol-that’s good to know. We are lucky here to have lots of fabulous child-friendly cafes.

  12. Think I’m going to have to make a trip to Bristol to check some of these cafes, around here we only have Costa, Nero, Starbucks and a coffee shop owned by Peter Andre (his is the only decent one !)
    #FoodieFriday

    1. Min says:

      I’m intrigued by the Peter Andre coffee shop! Is he a barista?

  13. Thank you for this awesome list. I love Bristol and hope to visit again this year. So far in my area I have only really found one really toddler friendly cafe but now you have inspired me to continue the search!
    Thank you for linking to #foodiefriday

    1. Min says:

      They are out there somewhere! Thanks for hosting and commenting.

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