Street banners to highlight Stoke-on-Trent’s ceramic future


16 Feb 2010
Posted by Tony Walley

Stoke-on-Trent’s world class ceramic brands are to be celebrated in a scheme to promote the city. 

As part of the city’s World Capital of Ceramics status scores of colourful ceramic based designs are being put up on lighting columns along the Potteries Way. The designs use images of some of the city’s 350 ceramic based companies including world famous brands such as Wades, Wedgwood and Steelite International. 

On Tuesday(16) work will start to put up the 92 banners along the stretch of ring road which welcomes visitors to the city. 

Sue Evans, chief executive of the Ceramic Industry Forum, welcomed the new banners as positive promotion for the city’s vibrant ceramic industries. She said:

“It is great to see the city council celebrating Stoke-on-Trent’s unique long-standing connection with the ceramic industry. There are more than 200 businesses based here in Stoke-on-Trent, from world class brands to pioneering technological teams. These banners will highlight to visitors the city’s unique culture and show the region off as the World Capital of Ceramics.” 

Stoke-on-Trent is home to more than 350 ceramic businesses including Wades, Wedgwood, Steelite, Johnson Tiles, Portmeirion and Aynsley.  32 per cent of the UK’s ceramic employers and 60 per cent of employees are based in North Staffordshire. Staffordshire University’s Master of Arts in Ceramic Design is recognised as one of the leading postgraduate programmes worldwide for its work in ceramic design for manufacture. Keele University’s Science Park is home to world-leading ceramics technologies and companies including BioComposites, who manufacture ceramic prosthetics. 

Councillor Brian Ward, Stoke-on-Trent City Council cabinet member for regeneration, said:

“The Potteries Way banners are part of the city’s multi-million pound regeneration plans. They will showcase some of the city’s big names in ceramics and welcome visitors as they arrive into the city. The Potteries Way is an important link road to our city so it is great that the banners will highlight what we have to offer.” 

Chris Proud, Head of Marketing and Design at Steelite International, said:

“The ceramic industry is a big part of Stoke-on-Trent’s future as well as its history. The banners show just how many big names are based here. The city has a wealth of creative talent and it is important that it is recognised and celebrated.” 

Last year, during the launch of a major independent study into the future of ceramics in Stoke-on-Trent, ceramic industry figures united to say that the city has the right to describe itself as the World Capital of Ceramics because it has the world’s greatest mix of:  

  • Ceramic heritage
  • Ceramic skills and expertise
  • Breadth and depth of ceramic manufacturing capability
  • Ceramics research and development
  • World renowned ceramic brands
  • Ceramics design and creativity

 
The announcement came during the first ever British Ceramics Biennial - the UK’s only festival to celebrate, showcase and support the country’s breadth of contemporary ceramics. The biennial is a 10 week festival of exhibitions, awards and events by artists such as international designer Jaime Hayon.

We were fortunate to be at today's launch and we have two short Audio Interviews for you to listen to.

The first is with Cllr Brian Ward Cabinet Member for Regeneration and the second is with Chris Proud Head of Marketing at Steelite.

Chris Proud of Steelite & Councillor Brian Ward
Post Gallery: 
Chris Proud of Steelite
The first of the 96 banners being installed

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Tony Walley Interviews Brian Ward

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Tony Walley Interviews Chris Proud - Steelite Int

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OWD POTTER's picture

Are they having a laugh? I

Are they having a laugh? I think they are mistaking Stoke for China or some other far east country, cause THAT'S where most of the pottery jobs have gone,
oh they stamp "made in Stoke on Trent" on them, so that's probably what they mean,

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The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives of the oppressing class are to represent and repress them.

Karl Marx

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Guest's picture

A shining example destined to

A shining example destined to live in the glorious history of useless marketing-driven waste, alongside the "Staffordshire, the Creative County" campaign, Mike Wolfe's Community Forums" and ice-rinks, the Creative Quarter; and the Worldgate project.

OWD POTTER's picture

* Ceramic heritage *

* Ceramic heritage
* Ceramic skills and expertise
* Breadth and depth of ceramic manufacturing capability
* Ceramics research and development
* World renowned ceramic brands
* Ceramics design and creativity

HAHA, hello,..... the REAL world calling,
Ceramic heritage? HISTORY maybe,

Ceramic skills and expertise?
where? how many apprenticeships do these companies offer? most of the "skilled" workers have been made redundant and/or replaced by machines, and when the few who are left retire or move on where will these skills be then?

Manufacturing capability???
a HUGE percentage of the manufacturing is done abroad, oh it might SAY "made in Stoke on Trent" underneath,...but how much of it IS "made in Stoke on Trent"?

world renowned ceramic brands?
yip, and that's WHY they keep a token factory or 2 going in Stoke so they can cash in on their "world renowned ceramic brands"

Stoke on Trent's ceramic future?...it hasn't got one.

---------------------------------------------------
The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives of the oppressing class are to represent and repress them.

Karl Marx

----------------

Guest's picture

this so called heritage put

this so called heritage put everyone who was old when I was young in their graves - keep it! shame is, now it's kids in developing countries dying for luxury dinner services... if it was an earthquake killing them instead of industry, we'd be out on the streets shaking tins! sod you Josiah!

Guest's picture

they say heritage soon you

they say heritage soon you will have to go to iron bridge to see bottle kilns/pot banks/coal mines/brick works/steel works. all we will have is areas that look like Hitlers drop zone's with bits of shiny metel and rubish.

Guest's picture

This is a brilliant idea: the

This is a brilliant idea: the city has a old tradition in ceramic manufacturing and the welcoming street banners will make every person that enters the city aware of that and maybe interested in these products. Will there also be vinyl banners to send the message inside the city?

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