New public square for Sunderland
A new public square, with artwork celebrating Sunderland's ship-building heritage, will be created in the city.
A new public square, with artwork celebrating Sunderland's ship-building heritage, will be created in the city.
Sunderland City Council has revealed what a new public square in the city will look like.
Space for the new square has been created through the realignment of St Mary’s Way.
The roundabout at the top of High Street West will be removed with the space that remains becoming a shared open space for people to meet and for public events and gatherings.
The new public square will feature artwork that celebrates the city’s industrial heritage.
A 3.5 metre high interactive sculpture, 'Propellers of the City' will include photographs of up to 500 Sunderland people who worked in the shipyards.
Sunderland residents are being asked to submit photographs of family members for inclusion to the Living History North East group based at Donnison School in Sunderland, where members are co-ordinating the collation of images.
The second artwork, ‘The Keel Line’ will lead from the ‘Propellers of the City’ sculpture, across the new public square and continue over the extent of the Vaux site towards the river.
At 291.7 metres the line will include the names of up to 9,000 of the most significant ships built in Sunderland's shipyards dating back to the early 19th century.
"I would personally like to thank the local community for their amazing donations of food, toiletries and clothing. "
Owners John and Irene Hays say there is ''light at the end of the tunnel'', after the pandemic forced them to close 650 UK stores.
There has been resistance to calls to dismantle memorials to the explorer.