The store is cool, but there are disadvantages... Due to the large flow of customers, especially before the holidays, there are a lot of people... and you can stand in line for half an hour quietly. The products are great. I think it would be a good idea for the management to analyze the load on the days of the "influx" of customers and add cashiers on these days so that the speed of service increases and people do not leave because of the long queue. Also, judging by the indignation of customers, it would be nice to analyze the demand for certain products these days in order to increase the production of these products. Perhaps everything is being done the way it should be, so that other products can be sold, but a queue of half an hour for cakes is too much. Without negativity, I wish you good luck and development!
On 14, 11, 2024, 42 people visited the factory.Children and adults liked it very much.The children were delighted to see the whole process of making sweets.The guide talked about the production in a very accessible, interesting and professional way, treating children with sweets at each stage.Children are asked to repeat the tour
A sweet excursion to a chocolate factory with a century-old history.
Many brands of Belarus are firmly entrenched in people's minds not only as leaders of the Belarusian industry, but also as enterprises whose products are of high quality. Among them are the sweet flagships Kommunarka and Spartak.
Both companies are leaders of the Belarusian confectionery market. Last year we visited a communal apartment in Minsk, and now we've looked at Spartak Gomel.
The building, which began the chocolate history of the company more than 100 years ago, has been preserved on the territory of the factory.
The starting point of the work of the future giant of the confectionery industry was on June 4, 1924, when the confectionery enterprise Prosvet was established in Gomel. Caramel, candies, toffee, marmalade — that's how it all started.
The factory received its current name, SPARTAK, in 1931. Ten years later, it became the largest producer of confectionery products in Belarus.
Even if you arrive at the factory blindfolded, your sense of smell will unmistakably tell you where you are: the incomparable aroma of melted chocolate is in the air.…
The tour will be interesting for both adults and children. It lasts 1.5 hours and ends with a mandatory sweet gift for everyone. The cost is 20 Belarusian rubles (2025). We recorded by ourselves on the phone. The factory's website has all the information about the tour and an online registration form.
I won't tell you any more, it's better to visit there personally, see and try everything, and feel proud of our enterprises. There is order and cleanliness everywhere, friendly staff, high-tech equipment, delicious products and only high-quality ingredients. They weren't allowed to film the production, so photos and videos are only from authorized locations.