
Campaigners claim Glassworks Sunderland location 'unsafe'
Last November the University of Sunderland announced the NGC would close in July 2026, blaming unaffordable repair costs for the decision.Glassworks, at the former Peter Smith Antiques site in Sunniside, is planned to open in 2028.
'Potentially hazardous'
The report presented to cabinet on Thursday claimed the new facility would "act as the catalyst for the establishment of the Sunniside Creative Hub" and would help increase footfall to the area.According to the document, the council acquired the building in 2024 "in poor state" and a survey identified a need to complete about £1.7m of repairs to the roof and windows alongside mechanical and electrical upgrades. Enabling works could start as soon as September, subject to funding.
A spokesperson for the group fighting to save the NGC said: "Placing a potentially hazardous industrial process next to family homes, and doing so without genuine public consultation, is reckless and disrespectful. "We are not being listened to."Campaigners urged the Labour-run city council to pause the Glassworks development, engage in "a full and transparent public consultation and develop the NGC as a safer and much more suitable location".
Sunderland City Council said: "The works considered at Thursday's cabinet meeting relate to the repair and preservation of the former Peter Smith Antiques building."As and when any planning application is submitted the necessary statutory processes will be followed, including appropriate public and stakeholder consultation."Sunderland Culture said: "We continue to make good progress in developing our plans for Glassworks: Sunderland. "This will include all necessary planning approvals and permissions."
Campaigners have previously raised concerns that the project costs could exceed the £7.5m estimate, especially if extensive safety and infrastructure modifications are needed to make the new site viable.The group has also warned that glass-making might be "lost forever" from Sunderland if the move failed. "The National Glass Centre is world-renowned," added the spokesperson. "Tearing it down without a proven, safe alternative is a cultural tragedy in the making."Sunderland Culture has previously said its fundraising target reflected the costs "for making the building fit for purpose as a glass-making space".It has also said there would be an interim provision in the city to address the gap between the NGC's closure in 2026 and Glassworks opening in 2028.
Follow BBC Sunderland on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Powys County Times
21 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
Cut red tape hindering marine restoration to boost coastal towns
Conservative MPs are urging Labour to cut red tape for marine restoration companies to support coastal communities in decline. The Conservative Environment Network (CEN) warned of the impact on towns of declining tourism and flooding, storms and coastal erosion, in a report outlining measures to help them. The group, which includes dozens of Tory MPs, called for regulation to be streamlined for projects such as the Solent Seascape Project, an initiative to restore saltmarsh, seagrass, oyster reefs, and seabird nesting sites between the Isle of Wight and mainland England. Shadow environment secretary Victoria Atkins backed the report, calling it a 'valuable conservative contribution for consideration in our ongoing policy renewal programme'. 'Britain's once-buzzing seaside towns are facing growing economic and environmental pressures. The Conservatives are determined to set out a plan to protect our coastal communities and preserve them for future generations,' she said. She added: 'Needless red tape continues to hamstring investment into marine restoration projects that could bring coastal communities jobs, nature-abundant habitats, and protection against the growing threats of climate change.' The network is also calling on Labour to use the flood defences budget to fund more nature-based solutions and to designate more highly protected marine areas in English waters to protect against practices like bottom trawling, in which fishing gear is dragged across the seabed destroying habitats and scooping up a wide array of species. They also want the Government to publish blue carbon codes – frameworks that define how carbon stored in marine habitats like seagrass and saltmarsh can be measured, verified and sold as credits – to unlock more funding for coastal resilience. They say these moves will boost nature recovery as well as local economies through nature tourism and job creation as more projects could get off the ground. Some 67% of English coastal towns are in the Office for National Statistics higher deprivation category and 3,500 properties are in areas at risk from coastal erosion. Kitty Thompson, head of campaigns at CEN, said offering solutions for coastal communities could also help the Conservatives challenge Nigel Farage's Reform UK. 'The teal tide is not inevitable. Reform offers an easy outlet of anger for many coastal towns who have watched their neighbourhoods fade. 'But they won't give these communities the solutions they deserve. If the Conservatives offer a pragmatic, credible alternative that can deliver for coastal communities, then they can challenge Reform in coastal target seats, stopping them in their tracks,' she said. Jacques Villemot, marine rewilding lead for Rewilding Britain, said the current marine licensing framework is outdated and called for the application process for projects to be streamlined. 'This framework urgently needs to be updated to support marine rewilding projects. Though necessary, in its current format marine licensing acts as a blocker, a laborious and costly process which was designed for approving developments like huge oil rigs and large wind farms,' he said. A spokesperson for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said: 'We are committed to supporting coastal communities. 'This government inherited flood defences in their worst condition on record. 'Through our Plan for Change, we're investing a record £2.65 billion over two years to repair and build more than 1,000 flood defences across the country, including nature-based projects. This will protect tens of thousands of homes and businesses.'


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
KEVIN MAGUIRE: Corbyn's new Left party will be the ultimate revenge mission
Who will be the first Labour MP to defect to Jeremy Corbyn's fledgling Lefter-wing rival? Names were doing the rounds before Westminster packed up for the summer. Denials too, it must be added. But the odds are one, two or disillusioned more will jump Keir Starmer's ship as the Prime Minister sets a centrist course. Particularly if Downing Street keeps suspending rebellious crew members for disloyalty. The radio chat is prominent Labour figures are waking to the danger of Corbyn's vessel, HMS Revenge capable of torpedoing Labour at the election if it wins, say, as little as 10% of the votes. It comes after a polling expert says that Keir Starmer's Labour won't be able to 'relax' even if Jeremy Corbyn's and Zarah Sultana's the new party fails. Starmer's Parliamentary majority is as wide as an ocean and deep as a pond, always vulnerable on an historically low 34% of the votes cast. The split on the Right between the Tories and Reform put him into high office. And a division on the Left could throw the PM overboard. Mocking 'magic grandpa' Corbyn's indecision, thrusting co-conspirator and fellow former Labour MP Zarah Sultana's youthful enthusiasm and a messy, pre-launch start isn't enough because the project is striking a chord with a section of the population feeling let down by Labour. Starmer's obsessed with Reform voters, viewing Nigel Farage rather than Kemi Badenoch as leader of the opposition. Fair enough. But polling found many Reform voters prefer Corbyn as a leader to Starmer. And Labour's Left flank is under attack, not only the Right. The debate ex-leader Neil Kinnock sparked within Labour over a wealth tax is expanding when advocates now include Anneliese Dodds, a rigidly conventional bean-counter in her days as Starmer's first Shadow Chancellor before opponent Rachel Reeves. The increasingly public discussion is also symptomatic of a more fundamental conversation about Labour's boldness as a Government. Corbyn and Farage are why more of the same isn't a viable option, no change in the Starmer brand of change inviting disaster. Labour does, of course, urgently need to better communicate what did the Romans ever do for us but the captain either alters course, steering to the Left, or Farage wins because Starmer ignored reformer Corbyn's challenge. Official recognition that class matters Creating 200 top civil service £430-a-week internships for bright kids from working class homes is official recognition that class matters. Labourer's son Pat McFadden, the Cabinet Office Minister and Wolverhampton Labour MP behind this drive, rightly wants to open doors frequently locked to talented young men and women from ordinary homes. Privately educated City spiv Nigel Farage's kneejerk conservative opposition to diversity would keep out White working class sons as well as daughters and Black and gay Britons in a country dominated by people, well, exactly like him. And Kemi Badenoch should be careful what she wishes for after her instinctive Conservative Party dismissal of McFadden's plan. If the Tories selected the best person for the job then Kemikazi would be on the dole. Nigel Farage defends former Reform MP and "monster" James McMurdock Nigel Farage's Reform UK defended one of the Hard Right party's few MPs, James McMurdock, after the mother of a former girlfriend branded him a 'monster' and court documents revealed he was jailed for repeatedly kicking the young woman until two security guards pulled him off. McMurdock broke with Reform only after questions were subsequently asked about Covid loans totalling £70,000 he claimed so when Farage screams about 'Lawless Britain' there are growing numbers thinking the wannabe PM should start closer to home. Donald Trump's British mini-me is apeing the 'American carnage' rhetoric of his US hero in the hope he too will con his way into monarchical tyranny. Don't get me wrong, much is wrong with modern Britain yet hard statistics, most notably in an authoritative Crime Survey for England and Wales based on people's real life experiences, records how overall crime is down on the 1990s. That will be of absolutely no comfort to anybody mugged, attacked and burgled or to a fantasist Farage deliberately ignoring facts. Lawless Reform is a real danger. Capitalism has always worked for the wealthy few - not the many Supreme Court judge Robert Reed neatly summarised capitalism in the £45billion car finance victory for banks and dealers. 'No-one,' opined the legal eagle, 'could reasonably think that any participant was doing anything other than considering its own interests.' The Arthur Daleys and legalised loan sharks were fixing deals to profit themselves, not any customers taken for a ride. That is how capitalism works and is why many of us, including me, are confirmed democratic socialists. Britain would be a far better country owned, controlled and operated by us for us rather than a wealthy establishment extracting every last buck out of us. Going up Talking about how aged 16 he was abused might be difficult for Chris Bryant but the Arts and Telecoms Mnister deserves huge credit when speaking publicly will help other teenagers preyed on by sexual predators. Going down When the UK Government owed £24milliion from a Covid VIP lane contract it's difficult to understand, after introduction messages were released, why Cameron crony and Tory peer Peter Gummer aka Lord Chadlington is still in the House of Lords Speaker's corner Nobody offered diabetes medicine for free. Pharmaceutical companies didin't go, 'wow, this is really important. People will really die without this. We'll just give it away for free'.' Anti-Violence Minister Jess Phillips was spot on that helping girls and women attacked by men can't be left to volunteers and needs to be treated like other big issues. She's a breath of fresh air.


The Herald Scotland
2 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Cut red tape hindering marine restoration to boost coastal towns
The group, which includes dozens of Tory MPs, called for regulation to be streamlined for projects such as the Solent Seascape Project, an initiative to restore saltmarsh, seagrass, oyster reefs, and seabird nesting sites between the Isle of Wight and mainland England. Shadow environment secretary Victoria Atkins backed the report, calling it a 'valuable conservative contribution for consideration in our ongoing policy renewal programme'. Victoria Atkins welcomed the report (PA) 'Britain's once-buzzing seaside towns are facing growing economic and environmental pressures. The Conservatives are determined to set out a plan to protect our coastal communities and preserve them for future generations,' she said. She added: 'Needless red tape continues to hamstring investment into marine restoration projects that could bring coastal communities jobs, nature-abundant habitats, and protection against the growing threats of climate change.' The network is also calling on Labour to use the flood defences budget to fund more nature-based solutions and to designate more highly protected marine areas in English waters to protect against practices like bottom trawling, in which fishing gear is dragged across the seabed destroying habitats and scooping up a wide array of species. They also want the Government to publish blue carbon codes – frameworks that define how carbon stored in marine habitats like seagrass and saltmarsh can be measured, verified and sold as credits – to unlock more funding for coastal resilience. They say these moves will boost nature recovery as well as local economies through nature tourism and job creation as more projects could get off the ground. Some 67% of English coastal towns are in the Office for National Statistics higher deprivation category and 3,500 properties are in areas at risk from coastal erosion. Kitty Thompson, head of campaigns at CEN, said offering solutions for coastal communities could also help the Conservatives challenge Nigel Farage's Reform UK. 'The teal tide is not inevitable. Reform offers an easy outlet of anger for many coastal towns who have watched their neighbourhoods fade. 'But they won't give these communities the solutions they deserve. If the Conservatives offer a pragmatic, credible alternative that can deliver for coastal communities, then they can challenge Reform in coastal target seats, stopping them in their tracks,' she said. Jacques Villemot, marine rewilding lead for Rewilding Britain, said the current marine licensing framework is outdated and called for the application process for projects to be streamlined. 'This framework urgently needs to be updated to support marine rewilding projects. Though necessary, in its current format marine licensing acts as a blocker, a laborious and costly process which was designed for approving developments like huge oil rigs and large wind farms,' he said.