Brilliant Bamboo secures brownfield site in Stoke for pioneering parklet
A Stoke-on-Trent-based bamboo project has found a home on a disused patch of concrete in a supermarket car park where a major pottery factory once stood.
Brilliant Bamboo, led by Gemma Thomas, has signed a 10-year lease on an approximately one-acre plot on the edge of Sainsbury’s car park in Stoke, on land formerly occupied by the historic Minton factory, which became part of Royal Doulton in 1968.
The site – mostly concrete and gravel, scattered with pottery shards – had previously been earmarked for retail development, but has remained unused since Sainsbury’s acquired it in the early 2000s.
The aim is to use the ‘parklet’ to explore sustainability, creativity and the impact on the environment, including whether bamboo can improve air quality in an area which traditionally has had high levels of pollution.
(Images by Brilliant Bamboo)
Other plans for the prospective site include art, science, nature and physical activities for all ages, as well as developing environmentally positive projects that improve the land, remove carbon and support native biodiversity.
Gemma (pictured on site) said: “It’s just a brilliant place to be based for the longer term. We’ve been looking for land for nine months and I was so excited when I stood on this spot – we even found a Minton tile embedded in the ground. It’s got real potential and history.”
Work has now begun to transform the site into the Brilliant Bamboo Brownfield Parklet – a sustainable community space created from repurposed materials and planted with bamboo in moveable planters.
More than 400 young bamboo plants – which have been growing in pots on the Spode site in Stoke – are being moved onto the land.
The team is now exploring off-grid power solutions, such as solar, as well as access to water and composting toilets. The site will feature artwork and planters created in community workshops – from tiles and bamboo-fabric banners designed by young people in the YMCA’s Go project to contributions from local artists and makers.
Community events are planned for Saturday, August 9 – which will be Brilliant Bamboo’s second birthday – and Thursday, August 28.
Gemma said: “We’d love people to come down, help us tidy the space and be part of the story from the very start. There’s a real sense of care and creativity in this project, from reuse and recycling through to exploring how bamboo could work in post-industrial places like Stoke.”
Brilliant Bamboo is continuing to work with partners including Hanley-based Inc Architects and Stoke-on-Trent City Council to bring the vision to life. A local charity is planning to hold its staff away day on site, and future events will make use of the space for community gatherings, workshops and talks.
Councillor Finlay Gordon-McCusker, cabinet member for transport, regeneration and infrastructure at Stoke-on-Trent City Council, said: “A lot of excellent work is going on in Stoke at the moment to regenerate and revitalise the town centre. We’re making great progress with our plans for the Spode site and we’ve recently secured government funding to transform the public area outside the library and market to make it more pedestrian friendly.
“This latest scheme by Brilliant Bamboo will build on these wider efforts to improve the look and feel of the town, and I am particularly pleased to see another brownfield site is being brought back into use through this scheme.”
To volunteer or find out more, email ge***@****************co.uk or follow Brilliant Bamboo on social media. You can also support Brilliant Bamboo with a one-off or monthly donation here.