The British Ceramics Biennial, Staffordshire.
British Ceramics Biennial is benefitting to the tune of £135,000, enabling it to create a Clay & Communities programme. Photo courtesy of British Ceramics Biennial - Jenny Harper.

Community organisations in Stoke-on-Trent benefit from £2.1m Government prosperity funding

1 min read

Stoke-on-Trent community-based organisations are benefitting from a total of £2.1 million Government funding.

The money is part of Stoke-on-Trent City Council’s allocation of the UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF).

In total, the City Council has been awarded £9,477,820 from the Fund to deliver projects which support local businesses, improve local spaces and assist residents with employment and skills.

The 11 beneficiaries fall under the Community and Place category – one of the three investment priorities identified for the funding.

The successful organisations are:

  • The Portland Inn Project– £496,290 to complete the co-designed renovation of the Portland Inn and deliver a creative educational programme.
  • Spode Museum– £282,000 to create The Spode Museum Mixing Bowl which will consist of a refurbished tearoom/café, outdoor green space, art gallery, community meeting room and two smaller studio/workshop spaces, all housed within the Spode Museum.
  • Middleport Matters– £233,546 to create a digital space that celebrates the area and allows improvements within the area to be made.
  • Trent Rivers Trust– £189,993 to run the “Rediscovering the Trent Valley Way in Stoke” project which will develop and deliver a variety of initiatives through Stoke-on-Trent along existing rights of way.
  • Citizen’s Advice Bureau– £175,000 to pilot a largescale benefit and tax credit take up campaign in selected areas of the city.
  • Urban Wilderness– £150,000 investment to bring a programme of large-scale, high impact events to Longton Town Centre. 
  • B-Arts– £140,000 to create Animate:72 an Arts Hub for Stoke Town, co-created by teams of experienced and emergent artists working with diverse local communities.
  • British Ceramics Biennial– £135,000 to create Clay & Communities: activity enabling hands-on engagement with clay and opportunities for people in Stoke-on-Trent to enhance their skills and to access new opportunities.
  • Canal and Rivers Trust– £109,633 to deliver a community-led placemaking project which will reach out to work across two waterside communities on the Trent & Mersey and Caldon Canals.
  • Stoke Creates– £99,250 to deliver the Cascade programme to reanimate spaces through creative concepts, animation and digital technologies as part of a Cultural Action Zones programme.
  • Claybody Theatre– £98,484 to engage communities in cultural activity culminating in two live-streamed events on New Year’s Eve 2023 and 2024, featuring local emerging music talent and storytelling.

Council Leader Jane Ashworth said: “The funding allocated to the Citizens Advice Bureau will form part of our cost of living support, giving all residents the opportunity for a financial MOT, to ensure they are getting the benefits and tax credits they are entitled to.

“The other exciting projects include waterside activities in the city’s canal network plus schemes across the city that will improve our heritage offer and drive footfall to places such as the Spode Museum and create cultural action zones across Stoke-on-Trent.”

Nigel Pye

Experienced journalist with a 30-year career in the newspaper and PR industry and a proven record for breaking stories for the national and international press. Nigel is the Editor of Daily Focus and Head of Creative at i-creation. Other work includes scriptwriting, magazine and video production, crisis communications and TV and radio broadcasts.

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