As well as the three Turl Street colleges, the street houses several shops, including an
Oxfam bookshop, one jewellery shop, a café, a stationery shop (Scriptum Fine Stationery), a whisky shop, a wine shop and the traditional gentleman's tailors, Walters of Oxford. From about 1900 to 2016 No.6 was the sole retail outlet shop of bespoke handmade shoemakers
Ducker and Son. Ducker's ladies department operated from No.13 in post-war years. Duckers shoes were posted to customers worldwide, having been made on personal foot lasts. 16 Turl Street was the site of one of the first Indian restaurants in England outside London, opened in 1937 by an Indian-born law student; Bir Bahadur, who having established an Indian restaurant in London (The Kohinoor in Roper Street), moved to Oxford and opened his second. The exotic decorations of the restaurant were recalled by
Kenneth Tynan, who was a regular diner, in his diaries The Taj Mahal closed in 1992. The building then went on to be a number of different restaurants, before becoming the QI Building ("QI Oxford") (associated with the
Quite Interesting television series), a private members club, In May 2007 the building was purchased by Curious Group, who enlarged the venue to include a former
Millets shop next door at no. 17 and renamed it Corner Club. Corner Club closed in December 2009 after failing to agree a new lease with the building owner;
Oxford City Council. From 2011, 16-17 was occupied by the Hub, a centre for Oxford student volunteers, and the Turl Street Kitchen. Profits from Turl Street Kitchen funded the Hub, located in the rooms above the restaurant. Turl Street Kitchen later closed and the Hub relocated to
Little Clarendon Street. The Turl Street colleges also have student housing above and around many of these shops. ==Miscellaneous==