New Briggate pop-up events planned as Leeds wins Historic England high streets heritage funding

Pop-up events, exhibitions and art installations are to be staged in a much-loved part of Leeds city centre thanks to a cash injection from a heritage organisation.
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A three-year programme of creativity and collaboration designed to celebrate the past, present and future of New Briggate will begin this month following a successful bid for support from Historic England.

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Leeds City Council previously secured £1.3m from the organisation’s High Streets Heritage Action Zone (HSHAZ) initiative to support regeneration-focused improvements to buildings and public space along New Briggate.

New Briggate is home to cultural institutions like the Grand Theatre as well as a popular bars and cafes. Picture: James HardistyNew Briggate is home to cultural institutions like the Grand Theatre as well as a popular bars and cafes. Picture: James Hardisty
New Briggate is home to cultural institutions like the Grand Theatre as well as a popular bars and cafes. Picture: James Hardisty
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Now the New Briggate Cultural Consortium – led by Leeds-based East Street Arts and including the council – has been awarded a further £119,774 for a complementary cultural programme that will showcase the area’s rich and diverse story with the help of specially-commissioned artists and community engagement.

Events will be held in New Briggate during the ‘delivery’ phase of the Leeds scheme in 2023, with the exact plans due to be shaped by research and engagement work that will take place with local communities over the next two years.

Sounds, pictures, moving images and, most crucially, people’s personal memories will all have a role to play in shining a fresh creative light on the street, which is part of the Grand Quarter Conservation Area and home to landmark buildings such as Leeds Grand Theatre, St John’s Church and the Grand Arcade.

The work in Leeds is part of the country-wide HSHAZ Cultural Programme, which is being led by Historic England in partnership with Arts Council England and the National Lottery Heritage Fund with the aim of making high streets more attractive, engaging and vibrant places.

A picture showing New Briggate in the 1920s. Picture: Leeds Libraries, www.leodis.netA picture showing New Briggate in the 1920s. Picture: Leeds Libraries, www.leodis.net
A picture showing New Briggate in the 1920s. Picture: Leeds Libraries, www.leodis.net
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Coun Jonathan Pryor, the council’s executive member for learning, skills and employment, said: “We are firm believers in the importance of our high streets as places that bring people together, giving them a real feeling of pride in their community.

“The council has also worked for many years to put culture at the heart of life in Leeds, having recognised its ability to challenge and inspire at the same time as supporting economic growth and regeneration in a way that is sustainable and inclusive.

“It’s particularly exciting, therefore, to hear about a scheme that will use the power of culture to celebrate the heritage of one of our own high streets. We look forward to seeing the various plans and ideas taking shape in the months and years to come.”

The funding award follows the success of a pilot project which explored the relationship between New Briggate and Leeds’s famed Burmantofts Pottery.

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A total of 117 participants from Shakespeare Primary School, Burmantofts Senior Action and the MAFWA theatre group worked alongside Kremena Dimitrova and Rosie Todd – independent artists commissioned by the New Briggate consortium – on the pilot.

It culminated in the creation of an illustrated storybook and a 99-piece clay tile game, soon to go on display at Shakespeare Primary. All participants will be invited to see it and will also receive a copy of the book to which they contributed.

The main Leeds cultural programme will continue this spirit of co-operation and inclusion by engaging with residents in nearby neighbourhoods such as Little London, Chapeltown, Woodhouse and Lincoln Green as well as the theatre-goers, drinkers and shoppers most commonly associated with New Briggate.

Helen Moore, programme and engagement lead at East Street Arts, said: “Following the success of the pilot project, we are excited at the prospect of three years of community-based, co-creative activity and the ability to work on a project that puts the people of Leeds at the heart of this story."

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The New Briggate Cultural Consortium comprises East Street Arts, Leeds City Council, Leeds Heritage Theatres, Opera North, Age UK, North Bar & Brewery, Leeds Civic Trust and the Churches Conservation Trust, with each member contributing widely-acknowledged expertise in their own field and a passionate belief in the potential and personality of the high street.

Duncan Wilson, chief executive of Historic England, said: “The high street cultural programme is a step change in the way we think about bringing high streets back from the brink.

“As we start to see these important historic spaces become regenerated through building work, it is the community-led cultural work that helps people to enjoy their high street again and also have a say in what the future of their high street might be.”

Physical improvements to New Briggate set in motion by the £1.3m awarded to Leeds in 2019 – plus match funding from the council – include repairs to historic buildings and finding fresh uses for empty floor space.

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