Rebuilding, recycling re-imagining...
by Sharon Macdonald
Like other cities around the globe, Sheffield is busy regenerating and
redeveloping itself. Place-marketing and image-management are crucial
tasks of the modern city in the global competition for visitors,
business, enterprise and capital. Here we look at some of the limits
and opportunities afforded by Sheffield's cityscape and material
cultures, and examine some of the ongoing, and possible future
directions for the city.
Cultural regeneration for local residents? The case of the Millennium
Galleries and Winter Garden by Kirsten Holmes provides an overview of
debates about, and the ambitions of, cultural regeneration, as well
as a thought-provoking range of cases elsewhere, and an account of
the considerable transformation that there has been in Sheffield
over recent years. The 'masterplan' for the city will also see
further change to the city centre in the coming years. Kirsten argues
that, unlike some attempts at cultural regeneration elsewhere,
Sheffield's has been couched much more in terms of local residents
than attracting outside business. This was so, for example, in
relation to the
Millennium Galleries
(opened 2000) and
Winter Garden
(opened 2002). The article here also presents the findings of research
by Kirsten and some of her students on who does in fact visit these new
Sheffield landmarks and how they see them.
In Materializing identities. Bricks coming out of the ground:
Rebuilding Norfolk Park Simone Abram contributes a chapter that might
have been in Forging the cityscape
in its account of how this particular
Sheffield estate came into being, and the visions of planners of Sheffield
over the years, or in Experiencing place
in its attention to local residents'
accounts of the area and its past - which also produces a fascinating insight
into the sometimes subtle ways in which residents' views may be 'not heard' by
those involved in reshaping a place. Her reflections on these processes,
however, also prompt us to reflect on just what is involved in
materializing place and identities. She shows well how contributions
that we might not immediately think of as themselves 'material' - such
as meetings, talk and visions - may, in some cases at least, have very
material consequences. On the basis of this, she draws out the implications
for the future - for the future of the social work of negotiating places into
being. This is, as she so vividly demonstrates, about much more than
knocking down or doing up buildings.
In Sheffield Life and times @ Weston Park Museum
Kim Streets - curator
of social history - likewise describes a project involving using materials
to create a new material culture within the city, in this case a new
permanent exhibition of social history in the refurbished
Weston Park Museum
, begun with
Lottery finding in 2002 and re-opened in 2006. A city museum is arguably
the civic institution most thoroughly endowed with the authority to
represent a city's material culture. Items that become part of the city
museum's collection become part of the official history of the city.
Material culture which is not included is much more likely to vanish
from the historical record; and, as Kim's account shows, it is much
more difficult for official civic materializing institutions, such as
museums, to tell the stories of those for whom there are no material
cultural collections available. Her account here provides a rare glimpse
into an attempt to revise a city's collections, fill some of its
perceived gaps, tell the stories - via material culture - of inhabitants
who might otherwise be forgotten, and, more generally, to create an
account of Sheffield for the future.
In the final article in our volume, Prue Chiles - a practising architect
and academic -presents her insightful and exciting view of how Sheffield
might be developed:
Re-imagining the City of Sheffield.
Currently, there are various visions for developing Sheffield, such as
plans for renovating Sheffield's (in)famous Park Hill flats
or another Sheffield University architect, Jeremy Till's visions of
Sheffield as 'Echo City' for the Venice Biennale
Here, Prue provides a vivid but also realisable vision of how the city
might be reshaped to draw on not just its distinctive geomorphology but
also a self-projection based in its historical strengths and future potential.
Sheffield has recently appointed its first 'Culture Minister' - Dr Ann
Gosse - and drawn up a
Culture Strategy.
This includes plans to position Sheffield as a European city.
The City has also embarked on a public consultation for its
new city strategy 2005-2010.
It is inviting comments on what is perceived
as distinctive about Sheffield and what the city might be known for by 2010.
Reply to:
http://www.sheffieldfirst.net.
It is our hope that this
volume too will contribute to stimulating debate about the city's future
and to creating a vibrant, and materially rich, place, culture and identity.
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