Posts Tagged ‘Birmingham Post’

Birmingham's heritage should be at the centre of 2013 City of Culture bid

Thursday, March 25th, 2010
Click above to find out more about Birmingham's bid for City of Culture

Click above to find out more about Birmingham's bid for City of Culture

In an extract from an article in today’s Birmingham Post, Chris Hargreaves, Birmingham City Council’s head of conservation (who after almost 40 years in city planning, is retiring this month) says that the city has ‘failed to exploit great marketing opportunities from its rich history,’ and that whilst the city has many conservation successes to its name, there has been little mention of this with regards to the 2013 City of Culture bid.

The article also mentions the sad news that the council will not be replacing Hargreaves and his team of conservation experts will be ‘broken up and absorbed into the planning department as part of recession-prompted clampdown on council spending.’

You can read the article extract here.

The Birmingham Post reports the plight of Newman Brothers.

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009
Newman Brothers by Brian Simpson on flcikr, click on the image for the original

Newman Brothers by Brian Simpson on flickr, click on the image for the original

As our effort to encourage AWM to think afresh about it’s commitment to the Coffin Works the Birmingham Post reports what’s going on:

Birmingham Conservation Trust, which has been working with AWM on the project, has launched a campaign to make the agency change its mind.

The trust’s director, Elizabeth Perkins, pointed out that AWM had already spent more than £750,000 buying the Victorian building in Fleet Street, along with stock including tools for making coffins and funeral artefacts.

She also revealed that the agency’s decision to cancel the grant is likely to leave the trust out of pocket.

“We have so far only received a small proportion of our fees for the last six years of work on AWM’s behalf,” she said.

“Most of our income is drawn at the end of a project. If our partner pulls out of the project it leaves us without the income.

“In effect the trust has used up several years worth of financial reserves helping AWM progress this project.

A decision by regional development agency Advantage West Midlands to cancel funding leaves the derelict Grade 11* listed Newman Brothers building in the Jewellery Quarter with an uncertain future.

For more see here and here. Thank you.

Conservation Areas at Risk – an English Heritage Survey

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Do you live in a conservation which you think is at risk?  Have you had experience of regulations protecting conservation areas being eroded?

English Heritage is approaching every local authority in the country for a first national survey of Conservation Areas as a means of identifying those at risk.  Recently Birmingham City Council said it could not longer full protect the Ideal Village Conservation Area in Bordesley Green (pdf map), which had an article 4(2) protection, because of the extent of breaches of conditions there. (See the Birmingham Post report here.)

EH wonders if you too are worried about a proliferation of plastic windows or oversized extensions, if so you can sign up to keep track of it’s campaign by signing up here. The English Heritage news release tells us:

“England has some 9,300 Conservation Areas, historic parts of cities, towns, suburbs and villages designated by local authorities to protect their special character. But what condition are they in? Are they cherished through a close partnership of council and residents? Or are they at risk from neglect, decay and inappropriate development?

Conservation Areas vary enormously. They include, for example, the Belgravia Conservation Area in central London, the industrial heritage of Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter, the fishing village of Clovelly in North Devon and the Victorian People’s Park Conservation Area in Halifax. The heart of a historic town might be a Conservation Area. So too might be a street of well-preserved 1930s semi-detached houses or an isolated group of farm buildings. Details of local Conservation Areas are held by councils and can usually be found on their websites.

English Heritage has asked every Local Authority in the country to fill in a questionnaire for each of their Conservation Areas as part of the first nationwide census of the condition of this important element of our heritage. The results will be announced and a campaign will be launched on 23rd June to help councils, communities and individual residents to care for these special places.”

Birmingham’s first conservation areas were created in 1969 in Harborne, Yardley, Edgbaston, Kings Norton and Northfield. You can find a full list of all 27 areas in Birmingham here:

www.birmingham.gov.uk/conservationareas.bcc

If you have any comments on conservation areas please leave them below.

For other’s blogging about conservation areas in the UK see also:

Icomos-UK

Audiences central.

The Bristol Blogger

Kingsdown Conservation Group (also in Bristol)

Liverpool Landscapes

Nemesis Republic

Margate Architecture