The Birmingham Press

Artworks celebrate Stirchley’s history

Since June 2011 Place Prospectors, a non-profit community interest company, has been working creatively with Stirchley residents, organisations and businesses in their Stirchley Prospects project, to stake claims, find hidden gems and create prospects for its future. The Stirchley Prospects project is interested in what is of value to people, what is unique about the area and what will be beneficial in the long term for regeneration that is badly needed.

Two of three planned temporary art works called ‘Prosperity’ have been installed in Stirchley.

The pieces feature imagery symbolising the area’s former industries and prosperity. Place Prospectors wish to add something beautiful to the environment, an area that was once home to many successful manufacturing businesses and a prosperous High Street.

Prosperity No. 1 - Stirchley

The first piece, located above the International Supermarket (previously Westprint and Glen’s Café) references the local willow beds on which locals earned a living, bees to represent the resident’s industrious nature and the beautiful Stirchley clock which hangs in Stirchley Library. The piece also shows pigs, an abiding memory, kept by locals for the Co-operative Supermarket who has had a presence in Stirchley for many years, and a crucial ingredient in Jewells award-winning pork pies, popular in the 1940s.

Prosperity No. 3 - Stirchley

Located in the window of Stirchley Prospects, Place Prospectors headquarters on Pershore Road, another piece references Cox Wilcox – local lamp makers and Guest, Keen and Nettlefolds, famous manufacturers of nuts, bolts, and screws. The piece also features cocoa plants in reference to the Cadbury’s factory nearby as well as horseshoes, a symbol of good luck for the future of the area.

Another piece, yet to be installed shows the older factors in Stirchley’s prosperity, the millstones of nearby Hazelwell Mill and the bridging of the River Rea.

The pieces will be located along the Pershore Road until April 2012.

A series of events organised by Place Prospectors celebrating Stirchley will take place over the next months: Stirchley Street Railway Station will be reclaimed from what is now known as Bournville Station, a memorial walk will take place to commemorate Hazelwell Lane, soon to be lost due to the impending Tesco development on the site, and a series of workshops will discuss the future of Stirchley Park located at the back of the Co-operative Supermarket.

For more information go to www.prospectors.org.uk

  • Stirchley Prospects is an arts and regeneration initiative run by Place Prospectors, non-profit  community interest company specialising in working with communities where they live, work and learn. The Stirchley Prospects project is delivered by its founders Jayne Murray and Emma Larkinson.
  • Stirchley Prospects can be found at 1427 Pershore Road, Stirchley and is open Tuesdays and Thursdays 10am-4pm.
  • The project has received funding support from MADE, Arts Council England and the Heritage Lottery Fund.
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