Sunniside, Sunderland

Sunniside is a district of Sunderland, North East England, towards the eastern side of the city centre, bounded to the west by Fawcett Street, to the south by Borough Road, and to the north and east by the Inner Ring road. A significant programme of urban development has established Sunniside as a centre of culture, film, dining, entertainment and art in the city. It is also known as the historic heart of Sunderland's legal and real estate sectors, with many solicitors and estate agencies based in the area.

Sculpture at Sunniside installed in 2008, a symbol of the area's growing regeneration

History

Sunniside grew up in the Victorian Era as the original business centre of Sunderland. At the height of Sunderland's power as a shipbuilding centre, most of the mercantile insurance and reinsurance companies and other associated business functions were based in Sunniside, as were a substantial number of foreign consulates, including the Netherlands, Denmark and Russia. Situated between West Sunniside and Norfolk Street is the old General Post Office building, now converted to residential use.

As the economic fortunes of Sunderland waned in the 1980s, however, many of the lucrative businesses left Sunniside and many others moved westward to new locations in the city centre and out of town, leaving the area to become plagued by urban decay. In the late 1990s, the Sunniside district was earmarked by the local council as a priority for urban renewal.

Regeneration

In 2003, Sunderland's area regeneration company, Sunderland Arc released 15 year long proposals for Urban regeneration in the area, and they worked with the One Northeast regional redevelopment corporation and the city council to begin improvements on Sunniside with an investment.[1]

The Place, Sunniside. A £6 million arts centre and anchor of local regeneration.

In 2007, the first redevelopment was completed; bringing the old Sunniside Gardens back to life with a complete makeover and a modern iconic sculpture to go along with it.[2] and the following year after that new bars and cafes in the area were opened, along with the new £6 million development arts centre, "ThePlace".[3][4]

Awards

The regeneration projects of Sunniside have won two national awards for their revival of that area of the city. In 2007, the area won an award from the Landscape Institute Awards[5] and in 2008 Sunniside the North East Renaissance Award from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.

Film-making

Sunniside is home to the film company Tanner Films Ltd. which was set up in 2008. The company's first film, a crime drama called "King of the North" starring Angus MacFadyen, is currently under production after it secured a £6 million deal from MonteCristo at the Cannes film festival.[6]

Attractions

Because of the regeneration projects and other private investment, Sunniside now has a strong range of attractions:

  • Sunniside Gardens
  • ThePlace modern art centre
  • Northern Gallery of Contemporary Art
gollark: Even if you didn't just invest whenever someone pinged you, you *could* just refresh a lot and see "ah, OCM is posting, better invest now".
gollark: That seems more like a bad patch over it than an actual fix.
gollark: It's an inevitable consequence of the whole "all you need to do to make more money is blindly invest every 4 hours" thing.
gollark: What way, exactly? Just the wildly increasing inequality?
gollark: Not much thought.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-02-26. Retrieved 2009-03-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Sunderland Arc, Sunniside
  2. Sunderland Arc, sunniside gardens opened
  3. The place, sunderland arc
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-10-03. Retrieved 2009-05-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Sunniside Partnership, Sunniside plans
  5. Sunniside scoops National award
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