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Opeyemi Adebowale Launches Multi-City Afroluxe Tradefair Across the UK
By Ugo Aliogo
Nigerian entrepreneur Opeyemi Adebowale, founder of C K Afrique Ltd, has announced a three-city expansion of the Afroluxe Tradefair in the UK. This expansion aims to establish a new commercial network for Black-owned businesses and cultural enterprises.
The multi-city tradefair will commence its upcoming schedule in Sunderland on July 4th, followed by stops in Bristol on September 5th and Hartlepool on November 1st.
Opeyemi founded the platform to directly address the systemic growth obstacles African and black-owned businesses encounter in the British market. This includes specifically targeting the lack of mainstream commercial visibility and corporate networking opportunities.
“Afroluxe is bigger than a market and bigger than a one-day event,” Opeyemi said. “We are building a space where businesses gain visibility, communities connect, and people discover opportunities that can transform their future.”
According to Opeyemi, the core objective of the multi-city tour is creating a repeatable economic blueprint for smaller vendors who lack heavy marketing budgets.
“There are brilliant entrepreneurs from Nigeria and across Africa who simply need to be seen,” Opeyemi said. “Afroluxe gives them the platform to showcase their work and scale. Visibility is important, but connection is even more powerful. We want vendors to leave with new customers, new partners, and new confidence.”
Several prominent diaspora business networks and local enterprise organisations have supported the initiative, including Hallmark HMO (based in Nigeria), Bukie Signature Consulting Limited, the Nigerian Community in Sunderland, Edge Rise Consultancy, African Tunes on Spark FM Sunderland, and Snow Multimedia.
Bukie Adebola-Ezeh, a UK-based business consultant, said that the structured trade fair framework offers critical institutional support that independent entrepreneurs frequently struggle to find when operating alone.
“Platforms like this are essential,” Adebola-Ezeh said. “They give entrepreneurs especially Nigerians the exposure and community backing they often struggle to find.”
Local representatives from the Nigerian community in Sunderland added that the upcoming dates will serve as a practical mechanism for long-term economic participation and regional trade integration.
By connecting local entrepreneurs directly with regional investors and broader consumer bases in Tyne and Wear, Bristol, and County Durham, the Afroluxe itinerary is positioning itself as a sustainable business ecosystem rather than a series of isolated pop-up markets.
“We are not trying to be just another event organiser,” Adebowale said regarding the 2026 expansion. “We are building a movement that helps businesses grow, communities prosper, and future generations see what is possible.”







