Archive for July, 2010

Cold beers, cheese and celebrity chefs – a day in the life of Fort Dunlop!

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

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I attended the ‘Taste of Birmingham’ event on the Fort Dunlop roof last week. It was a ‘pre’ event celebrating the launch of the actual festival which will take place across Birmingham this week.

More than 100 of our tenants came along (helped by the sunshine!) to taste lots of lovely locally produced products – including cheese and beers.

A celebrity chef, Alan Coxon, was on hand to give us more information about what we were eating, so it turned into a really informative afternoon.

You might have seen my colleague Emily’s earlier blog about another rooftop event at the Fort and its fair to say we are becoming quite partial to them (especially in these Summer months). It’s the largest ‘living’ green roof in the country and is vast in size with lots of permanent furniture and structures in place for parties.

Drop me a line if you’re interested in hosting an event up there. Or for any other details about the Fort.

Why Manningham’s Mills better…

Monday, July 5th, 2010

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Before

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After

Reading the Guardian’s recent report on the regeneration of Manningham and English Heritage’s new book on the town prompted me to think back.

I first visited Lister Mills in the late 1990s and was instantly struck by the grandeur of the buildings. Samuel Lister still has more patents than any other Englishman - perhaps the Bill Gates of his day. Yet moving around the derelict, empty, forgotten, mills (which had long since gone bankrupt) was a depressing experience.

To cheer me up I went a couple of miles down the road to Saltaire and saw Jonathan Silver’s Salts Mill which he had turned into a thriving shopping emporium with restaurants, bookshops, jewelers, the Hockney Gallery and lots of other businesses.

This made me determined to do something with Lister Mills. Many people had looked at redeveloping the Mill; ideas such as a Victoria and Albert North Museum and a factory outlet village had been talked about, but no one had been able to deliver. Delivery became harder with the unrest and riots in 2001 but through persistence and determination we were able to come up with funding packages and partnerships with Yorkshire Forward and Bradford Council, both of which helped us start work on the restoration of the first corner of the first building Silk Warehouse in 2003.

Seven years later the work is by no means finished and there’s still buildings to restore but we have created a lot. 255 apartments, the Manningham Mills Community Centre, Mind the Gap – a theatre for actors with learning disabilities – and a department of Bowling College Bradford which will open in September.

All this has helped with the beginnings of a real community. Much else has gone on in Manningham and it has gone through a lot, transforming from a prosperous town in Victorian times to somewhere that declined in the 1990s and is again fast becoming a diverse, successful place.

Urban Splash is proud to have played its part and we’re keen to do more.


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