Media Pack 2018/19 - Visit County Durham
←
→
Page content transcription
If your browser does not render page correctly, please read the page content below
Welcome to Durham, a sweeping emerald canvas with breathtaking dales, a dramatic coastline, a vale steeped in history and a vibrant city at its heart. Durham City, the proud capital of the county, is looped by the River Wear which has cut deeply into sandstone creating a peninsula that has been exploited for its natural defensive enclosure since before the Norman Conquest. The peninsula is now the site of Durham Cathedral, which was named the UK’s top attraction by TripAdvisor users, and Durham Castle. The two Romanesque buildings were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1986. The city is full of other hidden gems such as Crook Hall and Gardens, a 13th Century Medieval hall set in beautiful English gardens. To the west of Durham City, and covering more than half the county, sit the Durham Dales made up of Teesdale, an area hewn by glacial movements during Ice Age Britain and split by the River Tees, and Weardale, whose history and heritage is founded on lead mining. The Dales form part of the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), the second largest AONB in the country and also a European and UNESCO Global Geopark. On the far east of the county is Durham Heritage Coast, a stretch of wild and beautiful coastline reclaimed from the heavy industry of coal mining and brought to life by Turning the Tide, a £10m regeneration project that has reinvigorated the area. It was the 2010 winner of the UK Landscape Award. Magnificent sweeps of magnesian limestone grassland along the cliffs support a unique mix of plants, insects and several colonies of rare northern brown argus butterfly; exposed rocky shores at low tide reveal returning marine life, sea urchins and anemones and birds along the coast include skylarks, sanderling, purple sandpipers and not forgetting the annual visitor from West Africa, the little tern which nests at Crimdon every year. Surrounding the city is the Vale of Durham. In the 18th and 19th Centuries Northern England was a world leader in industrial innovation and enterprise and Durham was at the forefront of these dramatic changes. The county’s industrial development was based on coal and iron and the need to carry both to markets led to major innovations that revolutionised transport throughout the world. The Vale of Durham became the cradle of the railways. It was here on the 27th September, 1825 that the world’s very first public passenger steam railway began its maiden journey in Shildon.
Did you know? • 2018 marked 32 years of Durham Cathedral and Castle as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. • Mr Bean actor Rowan Atkinson and former Prime Minister Tony Blair attended the Choristers School in Durham City at the same time. • Durham Cathedral’s cloister were a key filming location for Hollywood blockbuster Harry Potter and the Philosophers Stone and the sequel The Chamber of Secrets. It’s depicted as part of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. • Durham Cathedral was voted UK’s No1 Landmark by TripAdvisor users in 2013. Together with Durham Castle, the cathedral was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1986. • The poet Lord Byron married Anne Isabella Milbanke at Seaham Hall in 1815. The marriage lasted little more than a year but the register at the nearby Church of St Mary the Virgin contains Byron’s signature. Seaham Hall on Durham Heritage Coast is now a luxury hotel. • In 1991, Blast Beach in Seaham was used as a location for Alien 3. It was because the beach was so blackened by coal waste that it was chosen as the location for the alien planet. • Twenty years earlier the climax of Get Carter starring Michael Caine was filmed further down the coast at Blackhall Rocks near Peterlee. At the time it had the last working coal-removal chute. • More recently the BBC drama The Paradise was filmed in the grounds of Lambton Castle near Chester-le-Street in the Vale of Durham. • In 1909 a team of amateurs from West Auckland won the Sir Thomas Lipton Trophy, known as the ‘first world cup’ beating Swiss side FC Winterthur. Two years later they retained the trophy by beating Juventus 6-1 in the final. • Seaham is a worldwide hotspot for collecting Sea Glass. The abundance of glass left on Seaham’s beaches (originating from the Londonderry Bottleworks factory which closed in 1921), has been smoothed by the force of the North Sea’s waves. Visitors travel from across the world to collect these little gem-like pieces of Durham’s heritage.
Durham: What’s new? The Auckland Project Auckland Castle at Bishop Auckland is undergoing a restoration process and will re-open in December 2018, as part of the wider regeneration Auckland Project. Existing walls and floors in the castle are being peeled back or re-finished to reveal their former glories; the medieval kitchen will be uncovered; St Peter’s Chapel will be refreshed and the extraordinary art collection re-hung. A new striking Welcome Building at the entrance to the castle will provide information on the castle, grounds and local area. It is due for completion in 2018. A new extension to Auckland Castle’s Scotland Wing will create a new museum of Faith, the first museum in England to explore the history of faith in the British Isles, from pre-history to the present day. This purpose-built extension to Auckland Castle will create 10 specially-designed gallery spaces across two floors. The Faith Museum will launch in 2019. A new Mining Art Gallery opened in October 2017. The new gallery, housed in a former bank in Bishop Auckland town centre, provides a permanent home for the renowned Gemini Collection of Mining Art, which includes works by local artists such as Norman Cornish. A dedicated Spanish Art Gallery will open in Bishop Auckland Market Place in 2019 along with a Walled Garden development in the castle grounds in 2019. www.aucklandcastle.org/future-plans Beamish: The Living Museum of the North Beamish is celebrating a £10.9million grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund for the Remaking Beamish project. The funding is a major milestone in Beamish’s history and it will help the museum create a range of new ways for people to experience the heritage of the North East. It is the largest single investment ever seen at Beamish. The centrepiece will be a reconstructed 1950s Town – meaning that alongside existing attractions depicting life in the early 19th and 20th centuries, the museum will once again include a period within living memory. Visitors will also be able to stay overnight in a recreation of a Great North Road coaching inn. www.beamish.org.uk
Open Treasure at Durham Cathedral Open Treasure, Durham Cathedral’s world-class exhibition space which opened in 2016, opened the doors to previously-hidden spaces within the Cathedral Cloister, representing some of the most intact surviving medieval monastic buildings in England and home to the best preserved monastic library in the British IIsles. www.durhamcathedral.co.uk/open-treasure Launch of augmented reality project at Durham Cathedral Durham City is one of a number of England’s historic cities which have collaborated to develop an innovative augmented reality (AR) product that is bringing heritage to life. The Durham Cathedral app was launched in 2017 and has been produced by the England’s Historic Cities consortium, of which Visit County Durham is a founding member, with funding secured from the Discover England Fund. Working in partnership with Durham Cathedral, the ground-breaking new AR experience consists of an app and videos that transport the user back in time to unveil the hidden lives of some of history’s most fascinating characters. In Durham City the AR experience brings the story of the historic cathedral to life through a set of trigger points inside the iconic building. Through the app, visitors can discover the earliest stirrings of recorded Eng- lish history, meet the Venerable Bede and experience a rare glimpse into the enigmatic and scholarly lives of the Benedictine monks. The ‘England’s Historic Cities’ app is available to download for free in Google Play and on the app store or at www.historic-cities.com/stories Kynren – an epic tale of England The UK’s most spectacular open-air live show returns to Durham in 2018. This live-action extravaganza takes the visitor on a whistle stop tour of 2,000 years of history, myth and legend. Taking place in the vast landscaped stage at Bishop Auckland, meet many of the characters and events that have shaped the North East – and the country as a whole – as scenes encompassing the Roman occupation to the Second World War unfold in front of your eyes. With a nightly audience of thousands and a cast and crew of almost 1,500 alongside horses, sheep, donkeys and geese, the scale of this show must be seen to be believed. Shows take place at dusk and run through the summer. www.elevenarches.org
Palace Green Library, Durham City The exhibition Lost Lives, New Voices: Unlocking the story of the Scottish Soldiers 1650-2018 will explore the history, discovery, scientific analysis and reburial of this group of Scottish soldiers who were taken prisoner by Oliver Cromwell after the Battle of Dunbar in 1650 and held as Prisoners of War in Durham. The story has received considerable media coverage as the remains of a number of these soldiers were uncovered in November 2013 during the construction of the café at Palace Green Library in Durham City. The excavation and subsequent analysis of the skeletons are the subject of a major research project taking place at Durham University and the exhibition aims to broaden public engagement with this project. There has already been significant public and media interest in this project in the UK and the USA where a group of surviving prisoners were transported as indentured servants. By the time the exhibition takes place, the excavated remains will have been re-interred but the exhibition will bring together items from local, national and international collections to tell the story of the soldiers from a number of perspectives. www.dur.ac.uk/palace.green Hotel Indigo, Durham City – NOW OPEN! This new four-star boutique hotel, located on Old Elvet, is moments from the historic Durham City centre. The multi-million pound redevelopment has seen the transformation of former council offices into an 83-bed hotel. The Grade II listed Old Shire Hall was built in 1896 to house the county council and used as the headquarters of Durham University until 2012. Featuring a cocktail lounge, meeting rooms and a Marco Pierre White restaurant, all retaining the Victorian heritage of the building whilst embracing contemporary culture, the design of the hotel is a nod to the city’s ancient history and bright future. www.thisisdurham.com/accommodation/hotel-indigo-durham-p902141 Lumiere Durham - November 2019 The UK’s largest outdoor light festival returns in 2019 to light up Durham City over four magical evenings in November, illuminating Durham City for the sixth time. The sensational event, which is held every other year, returns to Durham to once again transform the city into a nocturnal art trail. Artists from around the world will illuminate the city in delightful and unexpected ways, with a series of light installations to explore. www.lumiere-festival.com/durham-2017
Key Events 2018 • England V Australia ODI Durham County Cricket Club: 21 June • Kynren – An Epic Tale of England: 30 June - 15 September • Brass: Durham International Festival: 13-22 July • The Bowes Museum, The BFG in pictures: 14 July - 30 September • Locomotion: Autumn Steam Gala: September • Durham Book Festival: 6 - 14 October • Durham City’s Traditional Christmas Festival: 30 November - 2 December Coming up in 2019 • Auckland Project – opening of Spanish Art Gallery and Auckland Castle • Opening of Durham Gin Distillery Visitor Experience • ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 (three matches in Durham) • Opening of Durham Cathedral Central Tower • Lumiere 2019 •The Bowes Museum’s Annual Christmas Markets
Get in touch... Sophie Hardy: Communications Executive Visit County Durham T: 03000 261 223 M: 07867 907 033 E: sophie.hardy@visitcountydurham.org Visitor website: www.thisisdurham.com Corporate & Media Enquiries: www.visitcountydurham.org @ThisIsDurham @VCDBusiness
You can also read