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Showing posts with the label Unofficial Proposals

Friargate Good Yard and Derby University - a perfect fit!

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It’s been derelict for over 50 years. It’s an eyesore. But despite the attention of arsonists and vandals over the years it remains one of Derby’s most magnificent buildings. The last major proposal for the site was back in 2011 when planning permission was granted for a (Tesco) supermarket with a large extension to the warehouse with parking underneath. Housing was proposed for the western end of the site bordering Great Northern Road. Following the economic downturn nothing came of these plans, like many before it, although the western end of the site has since been sold off to the Cathedral School. Plans for a new build school have been submitted and they are currently waiting on a decision. The warehouse itself built in 1877 by Kirk and Randall, and listed as Grade II in 1986, is part of the wider Friargate Station development on the now defunct Great Northern Line through Derby. The Grade II Bonded Warehouse from above - showing the serious state of disrepair Alt...

Oakes Yard - a new artist’s quarter for Derby, reinvigorating the High Street and reinventing Green Lane

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While reports of the death of the High Street may be a little premature, British High Streets are certainly under threat. Last years Portas Review, was at least recognition that something needs to change. One of the 28 recommendations was that all new out of town development should stop. This simple step may go some way to stop the rot but what is really needed is for new "in-town" development, and Portas identifies a number of ideas to try and bring back some vitality. St Peters Street is Derby’s classic high street and like many other high streets across the country, it is suffering. It is however, an immensely important street for the City - acting as the ribbon connecting the various shopping areas and its health is vital if the city centre is to operate as an effective whole.   St. Peters Street - Derby's classic 'high street'   The "Westfield Effect" (where retailers flee one part of the city to inhabit a new shiny shopping centre...

Joseph Wright, Burnaston House and a new gallery for Derby?

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There has been a bit of a media babble recently regarding the artist Joseph Wright and the legacy of his work to the people of Derby. A succession of articles in the Derby Evening Telegraph has certainly helped raise the profile of the artist locally and also to put on the agenda the question of how Derby should capitalise on his legacy. Joseph Wright of Derby - The Orrery - his most famous painting, but are we making the most of his legacy? While his works now sit in a 'refurbished' (or should we say 'tarted up'?) Derby Museum and Art Gallery, there is apparently much more to the collection that has been rarely seen by the public, and the current home is surely not befitting the legacy that the Derby Museums trust (aka Derby City Council) is responsible for maintaining. One of the most recent articles in the Telegraph caught my eye. It was about Kevin Ellis of who owns most of the Grade 2 listed but demolished Burnaston House (demolished to make way for Toyo...

Becket Well - Towards a New Future

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The Becket Well area has long been neglected and is truly an eyesore. Even before Debenhams deserted it for the gleaming new Westfield, the area was blighted by a poor environment and a lack of coordinated vision. Plans for redevelopment have come and gone, nothing more than promises unfulfilled.  The opening of Westfield has changed the fabric of the city centre. A fact which needs to be both acknowledged and understood. The Council’s vision for the regeneration of Becket Well was retail led, but with the core retail area now shifting to the east of the city, there would seem little opportunity for this type of development. Anyone want an old department store? But the area is still important to Derby city centre. Victoria Street is still a major route through the city and while not now in the main retail core, Becket Well remains on the retail fringes and a stones throw from the major retail shopping thoroughfare of St. Peters Street. Retail should still play a part in ...