Celebrate Chesterfield

Perez duo gear up for Father’s Day races

Father’s Day on Sunday will be one to remember for Chesterfield’s well known rally driver Steve Perez with both Steve and his son set to compete in different Ginetta races at the Croft circuit in North Yorkshire.

Seb Perez, Steve’s 16 year old son, will compete in the Simpson Race Products Ginetta Junior Championship – the popular race series contested by 14 to 17 year-olds.

Father Steve, 4 times British National Rally Champion and 2014 BTRDA Gold Star Rally Champion, is set to race in the more prominent Protyre Motorsport Ginetta GT5 Challenge with his Amigos and Global Brands sponsored car.

More familar with the mud and dust of the forests of Wales in his VK Kick Energy sponsored Ford Focus WRC rally car, Sunday’s competition will be a big change for rally driver, Perez Senior.

Chairman of Chesterfield-based Global Brands, Steve Perez said, “It’s a very different discipline driving a race car on a circuit, but the Ginetta GT5 is a very easy car to drive; I just have to remember I am not in a group 4 Escort rally car on some deep forest track and cut out the Scandinavian Flicks!”

Son Seb will be in high spirits this weekend after his latest race weekend at Oulton Park just over a week ago in which he had a fantastic weekend. Seb jokes: “I’m sure he (Steve) will be doing some learning off of me for a change; it would be good to see him get a nice Father’s Day gift of a win at Croft.”

The end of the Ginetta Junior season is at the beginning of October and there is still a long road ahead for Seb to prove what he is made. Seb’s performance and all the action is broadcast live on the Sundays on ITV 4.

Editorial by Paul Horton. 

Images – Landscape: Perez in action at Oulton Park: Jakob Ebrey Photography. Portrait: Paul Horton Motorsport Photography.

Perez in action at Oulton Park: Jakob Ebrey Photography

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Summer

Tickets on sale for first RHS Flower Show at Chatsworth

Tickets are now available to buy for the much-anticipated RHS Chatsworth Flower Show.

The iconic, spectacular 1,000-acre parkland – home to the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire and set in the heart of the rolling Derbyshire countryside – is set to host the show for the first time in June 2017.

Nick Mattingley, Director of RHS Shows said: “RHS Chatsworth will be playful, fun and unforgettable for visitors from beginning to end. We, and our contributors, are developing really exciting ideas for show content, we’re looking forward to sharing them as they develop over the next year.”

“For the 2017 show, the overarching theme will be ‘Design Revolutionaries’, celebrating creative people through history, the present and future, who through their foresight and innovation change the way we think about and approach gardens and garden design.

The show will celebrate great historical revolutionaries such as Sir Joseph Paxton and Lancelot Capability Brown; both of whom have left a lasting legacy in landscape design and had a great impact on the Chatsworth Estate.

The Floral Marquee will take inspiration from Joseph Paxton’s Great Conservatory which housed a host of horticultural specimens, from exotic palms and aquatic plants, to brilliantly coloured flowers.

Chatsworth

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Summer, Visiting

Over 50 new homes planned for former Newbold School site

Plans have been announced for 56 new homes to built on the former Newbold School site in Chesterfield.

The 4.8 acres of land is to be sold to Miller Homes by Chesterfield Borough Council and Derbyshire County Council for a mix of two, three, four and five bedroom houses. Most of the houses will be two storey properties, with four planned to be two-and-a-half storey homes and one a bungalow.

The residential area would be accessed from Newbold Road and covers a rectangular area that is also next to Loundsley Green Road and Newbold Back Lane.

The land has been vacant since Derbyshire County Council demolished the former Newbold School in 2006. It is allocated as a site that is suitable for housing, although planning permission will be required before the development could go ahead.

When a planning application is submitted the council will seek agreement for up to 30 per cent of the houses to be affordable homes and require Miller Homes to make a Community Infrastructure Levy payment that will contribute to education and open spaces facilities, such as playgrounds, in the borough.

Councillor Terry Gilby, Chesterfield Borough Council’s deputy leader and cabinet member for planning, said: “This is an important site in the town and if planning permission is approved then having 56 homes on this site would make an important contribution to the borough’s housing needs.

“It would also deliver that housing on a brownfield site that is already allocated as being suitable for housing, subject to the correct planning permission being in place.”

Derbyshire County Council’s cabinet member for council services, Councillor Andy Botham, said: “This proposal shows how two authorities can work together to provide much-needed affordable housing in Derbyshire.”

Miller Homes is intending to carry out initial public consultation with local residents in the coming weeks ahead of submitting a formal planning application.

Newbold School, which has since been renamed Outwood Academy Newbold, moved off Newbold Road in 2006 to merge its lower and upper schools on a single site in Highfield Lane.Chesterfield views - Crooked Spire

Posted in About Chesterfield, Business, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure

Employment trend remains positive

The number of people in work in the East Midlands increased by 15,037 and the number of people out of work fell by 2,804 in the three months to April, according to figures released this morning.

The latest regional employment bulletin from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed that between February and April, there were 2.27 million people in jobs and 106,203 people unemployed across the region.

The region’s unemployment rate has fallen to 4.5%, well below the national average of 5.1%.

In terms of Jobseekers’ Allowance (JSA) claimants, there was a monthly decrease of 550, to 31,000 across Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire in May, and there were 4,295 fewer claimants across the three counties than there were in May 2015.

In Chesterfield there were 1,115 claimants in May 2016, which is 25 fewer than the figure reported in April (1,140) and 210 lower than the same month last year (1,325). The current percentage of the population claiming the benefit stands at 1.7% and is below the national average of 1.8%.

Scott Knowles, Chief Executive of East Midlands Chamber*, said: “The latest employment figures for the region are once again positive and show that, in spite of the political paralysis we are seeing as the EU Referendum campaign nears its conclusion, businesses here in the East Midlands continue to grow.

“From a business perspective, the referendum debate has been a shouting match, heavy on hyperbole but light on the sort of cool-headed information and mature argument that local business leaders required.

“While the views of individual business people differ on whether Britain should vote Remain or Leave, their disappointment with the tone and conduct of the campaign is near-universal.

“So, too, is their frustration about everything that has been put on hold while Westminster has indulged its European obsession, which has crowded out everything else and has meant that other issues have barely got a look in.

“This inertia has set in at precisely the time that tough decisions need to be made in the interests of the country, its businesses and its economy, such as airport expansion, finalising the eastern leg of HS2 and the devolution of powers to regions, including the Midlands Engine.

“Regardless of which way the country votes next week, our leaders will need to demonstrate that they are ready to make some of the big choices that have been put off for too long, including finance for investment, skills provision and the delivery of first class digital and transport infrastructure, and do whatever it takes to get Britain back to business.”

Growth Sculpture Horns bridge Roundabout

* East Midlands Chamber (Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire)

Posted in About Chesterfield, Business, Celebrate Chesterfield

Archbishop of Canterbury to visit Derbyshire

The Diocese of Derby has announced the full itinerary for the Archbishop of Canterbury’s visit to Derbyshire taking place over three days from 21-23 June 2016.

Accompanied throughout the three days by the Bishop of Derby, Alastair Redfern, the Archbishop of Canterbury will travel to the south, north and east of the county to witness the opportunities and challenges in Derby Diocese.

On 22nd June the Archbishop will speak at a business networking event taking place at St Thomas’ Centre in Brampton, Chesterfield from 4.00pm. The focus will be on the challenges facing businesses in the current economic climate followed by a question and answer session.

On the same day the Archbishop will also deliver a keynote speech to support Derby Diocese’s aim to encourage closer partnerships at a Social Projects lunch held at St.Barnabas Centre, Danesmoor, from 12.30pm. As well as meeting networks of Credit Unions, Foodbanks and Citizen Advice Bureaus, the lunch centres on the importance of working in partnership to provide support. He will have lunch at the Feeding Derbyshire Super Kitchen, the project which uses surplus food from supermarkets to provide affordable meals to the community.

Bishop of Derby, Alastair Redfern said: “We’re delighted to welcome the Archbishop of Canterbury on his first pastoral visit to the East Midlands. It’s a wonderful opportunity to showcase the important work being carried out across Derbyshire as we look to face the challenges together. We hope his visit will inspire many more to get involved in making our communities stronger whether through their church, workplace, social group, school or college.”

The Archbishop carries out two to three pastoral visits to dioceses a year, where he has a chance to witness the mission and ministry going on and to encourage them in their work.

Archbishop of Canterbury Visit to Derbyshire

Posted in About Chesterfield, Business, Celebrate Chesterfield

World-renowned landscape designer Capability Brown inspires Florabundance

The legacy of world-renowned landscape designer Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown is the inspiration behind this year’s Florabundance festival at Chatsworth, taking place from 24-28 June.

Leading floral designer Jonathan Moseley is set to showcase extravagant and colourful displays featuring British flowers, herbs and fragrances celebrating the tercentenary of the iconic garden designer.

‘Capability’ Brown transformed the parkland at Chatsworth in 1760 designed out of what was then working farmland – a challenge for the great designer who often talked of a garden’s ‘capabilities’ which earned him his well-known nickname. He continues to be hugely influential to landscape gardeners and architects across the world to this day.

This year’s Florabundance will see Chatsworth transformed with colourful displays of British grown flowers, fragrances and herbs and unusual exotics inspired by the current exhibition ‘The Grand Tour’. Each room will be bursting with foliage and colour and will have its own distinct features, with the Chapel drawing inspiration from Damien Hirst’s Saint Bartholomew, Exquisite Pain. Local growers from Derbyshire and Yorkshire will provide assistance in setting up the displays.

The house will be dressed with large floral sculptural installations in both classic and contemporary styles using a combination of foliage specially gathered from the Chatsworth Estate.

The Sculpture Gallery is always one of the highlights of the event and will feature a collection of naturalistic displays influenced by the Chatsworth gardens and wider Capability Brown landscape.

Jonathan Moseley will be hosting a series of demonstrations and a workshop during the exhibition where visitors will be shown how to create inspirational designs using British flowers and receive top gardening tips from the renowned designer.

Florabundance takes place at Chatsworth from 24-28 June. For more information search online for Florabundance Festival.

(Image below shows leading floral designer Jonathan Moseley).

jonathan-moseley_Florabundance_2016

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Summer, Visiting

Community choir to perform at West Studios

Chesterfield’s community choir Qdos is set to showcase some of its best songs this week in a free performance taking place on Thursday 16th June at West Studios on Sheffield Road.

Set up in March 2015 by Qdos Creates – a local arts charity, which deliver projects, performances and workshops for children and adults locally and nationally – the choir includes members of all ages.

Anjie Taylor, Co Founder and Artistic Director of Qdos Creates comments: “There will be no written music or any instruments – just the natural voice and lots of lovely harmony lead by Andrea Small, a natural voice practitioner. We look forward to seeing lots of people at our performance!”

Community choir Qdos will perform at West Studios, Sheffield Road, Chesterfield on Thursday 16 June at 11.15am and everyone is welcome to attend. The performance is free of charge and refreshments will be available to buy.

The group is currently looking for a local sponsor or further funding so the choir can continue. If you are able to help with this or would like to join the choir please email anjie@qdoscreates.com or call 01226 242905.

Qdos Community Choir

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Summer, Visiting

Chatsworth announces full programme for Art Out Loud

World-renowned artists, Jenny Saville and Maggi Hambling, the legendary historian, diarist and curator Sir Roy Strong, and the potter and designer Emma Bridgewater are all set to join the programme for this year’s Chatsworth Festival – Art Out Loud.

The group – along with 20 other artists, curators and writers – will transform Chatsworth into Britain’s most exciting destination for art lovers over three days this September.

Now in its second year, Art Out Loud offers an insight into the work, inspirations and opinions of the art world’s leading names.

Key themes to be explored at this year’s festival include: an examination of the artist’s process (Jenny Saville, Maggi Hambling); how East meets West in art (artist Edmund de Waal and author Peter Frankopan); the importance of design in buildings and objects – and what we should do with historic buildings (Deyan Sudjic, Amanda Levete, Anna Keay) and the role of the curator in bringing art to life (Julia Peyton-Jones, Sir Roy Strong, Nick Cullinan, Per Rumberg).

(Image below, clockwise from left: Art Out Loud speakers Sir Roy Strong; Maggi Hambling; Emma Bridgewater; Jenny Saville.)

Art Out Loud speakers Sir Roy Strong; Maggi Hambling; Emma Bridgewater; Jenny Saville

 

The festival will also examine the ways in which art and culture are thriving in the north of England. Maria Balshaw, Director of Manchester’s Whitworth Gallery, explains why it’s ‘Not so Grim Up North’ and husband and wife team Emma Bridgewater and Matthew Rice discuss their flourishing Stoke-on-Trent ceramics business.

The Devonshire collection and current exhibitions will feature prominently (Duke of Devonshire, Hugo Vickers) and, as Chatsworth celebrates the tercentenary of the birth of Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown, there is also a particular emphasis on the art of garden design and on landscapes (Dan Pearson, Simon Thurley and Jonathan Warrender). Please see below for further details.

As well as a stimulating programme of talks, this year’s festival will include: a special exhibition to mark 25 years of the local Peak District Artisans collective; A Gift for Eleonora, a performance piece in Chatsworth’s Victorian Theatre devised by two arts academics from the University of Derby; and the introduction of festival events for children.

Martin Brown, illustrator of the Horrible Histories series of books, will be a major attraction for younger attendees. With a focus on the art of cartooning, his Sunday morning show promises to show everyone that they can draw – and have fun along the way.

(Image below left to right: The Duke of Devonshire; Horrible Histories illustrator Martin Brown.)

Art Outloud - Horrible Histories illustrator Martin Brown

 

Art Out Loud is working in partnership with The Serpentine Galleries to hold Build your own Pavilion workshops for children aged 8-14, a new educational element for this year’s festival. The ‘ed tech’ company Kidesign will host a Saturday workshop for children to design and make their own model pavilions for submission to the national competition. Entry to this session is free of charge, but is subject to availability and must be booked in advance. Local schools will be invited to attend a design and build workshop on Friday 23 September, and older pupils will join Jenny Saville’s talk ‘Beyond the Human Body’ on the same day.

The Duke of Devonshire commented: “After the success of last year’s inaugural Art Out Loud, we are thrilled to announce the programme for this year’s festival, where we will hear from artists, curators and writers who share a passion for art. We hope all attendees, whether new or returning, young or old, will enjoy the beautiful surroundings of our home at Chatsworth and will leave us feeling inspired”.

Art Out Loud takes place from 23rd – 25th September across two venues at Chatsworth – the magical setting of the South Lawn and in the historic Theatre. The Build Your Own Pavilion workshop will be held in The Stickyard, Chatsworth’s outdoor education centre.

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Visiting

Town centre fun to welcome Aviva Women’s Tour

Residents and visitors can take part in a host of events in Chesterfield’s town centre this Friday 17th June to celebrate the arrival of the world’s top women cyclists competing in stage 3 of the Aviva Women’s Tour.

Coordinated by Chesterfield Borough Council, events at Chesterfield Town Hall, Rose Hill will include:

• A Workplace Challenge event, allowing companies and individuals to hop on stationary bikes to see who can pedal the furthest (time slots available between 8.30am and 1pm);
• A cycling promotional area open from 10am to 3pm
• A display of disability bikes by Wheely Fun Wheels from 11am to 3pm with the chance to have a go from noon to 1pm;
• A display by a unicycle display team from 11.30am to noon.

Events in and around the market place include:
• Students from Chesterfield College presenting spin bikes and advice on activities for women from Active Chesterfield in New Square from 9.30am to 3pm;
• A chance to have a go on kids’ balance bikes outside the Market Hall from 10.30am to 1pm.

There will also be displays by a unicycle display team at Vicar Lane Shopping Centre from 12.45pm to 1.45pm and 2.15pm to 2.45pm.

Councillor Amanda Serjeant, Chesterfield Borough Council’s cabinet member for town centre and visitor economy, said: “It is a great honour for Chesterfield to welcome the world’s top cyclists as the Aviva Women’s Tour takes place in the town.

“As well as seeing the thrilling finish of the race in the market place, we have a packed programme of fun events for all ages to take part and learn more about cycling and fitness in the market place, Vicar Lane and outside the Town Hall – I’d encourage everyone to come along and join in.”

The Aviva Women’s Tour will enter the town centre by Saltergate, Soresby Street, Rose Hill, West Bars and Low Pavement before finishing in the market place between 1.30pm and 2.30pm where the podium presentation will take place.

This event will be attended by local schools who will take part in guided cycle rides and by the Eroica Britannia cycle team.

Find out all the details for the Stage 3 finish in Chesterfield including family entertainment, road closures and parking information.

Aviva Women's Tour

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Summer, Visiting

Still time to enter Chesterfield in Bloom competition

Time is running out to enter this year’s Chesterfield in Bloom competition which closes on Friday 24th June.

Run by Chesterfield Borough Council, there are a total of ten categories open for entry this year, from Best blooming pub or restaurant sponsored by Weightron Bilanciai to Best kept allotment site sponsored by Chesterfield Markets.

Finalists will be invited to an awards ceremony this September and some of the entrants may also be visited by the East Midlands in Bloom judges next month as part of their tour of the borough.

Councillor Chris Ludlow, Chesterfield Borough Council’s cabinet member for health and wellbeing said: “Last year, we had more than 100 entries to the Chesterfield in Bloom competition and the standard of them is always very high.

“Chesterfield in Bloom is not just about growing pretty flowers; people with well-kept landscaping can enter – and if you don’t have a garden, you can enter the best kept hanging basket category. There really is something for everyone and I encourage people to take part.”

This year’s Chesterfield in Bloom competition closes on Friday 24 June. For more information, download an entry form using the link below or contact john.ramsey@chesterfield.gov.uk.

Chesterfield in Bloom competition 2016 entry form.

Crooked Spire Chesterfield

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Summer, Visiting

Euro 2016 set to boost Derbyshire economy

The Derbyshire economy could be boosted by as much as £32.7m during this summer’s Euro 2016 football championships, according to new figures.

East Midlands Chamber* has analysed national data which predicts that the UK economy will benefit by up to £2.5bn in additional spending by consumers during the tournament – a similar level to that seen during the 2014 World Cup.

The figures predict that thirsty football fans across Derbyshire will drink more than £768,000 worth of beer during the course of the tournament, while those in Derbyshire who fancy a flutter will gamble around £6.5m on the outcome of games.

There is a downside, however. A separate study** found that the Derbyshire economy could take a -£2.6m hit as a result of lost productivity when England play Wales at 2pm on 16 June, as employees ‘throw a sickie’, take the afternoon off or spend working time browsing news and social media sites to keep tabs on the score.

Lucy Robinson, the Chamber’s Director of Resources, said: “We know that many people in the East Midlands are fanatical about football and this is set to translate into an economic boost for the region as fans shell out on the latest gadgets, merchandise and food and drink in preparation for and during the tournament.

“However, businesses may need to apply a bit of common sense if they have staff who want to watch the big games, to avoid a spike in unauthorised absence and the problems that come with it.

“A little flexibility on both sides, such as allowing staff to watch the games – subject to TV Licensing rules if on company premises – and then make up any lost working time at a later date, would go a long way to resolving any such issues.

“It’s important, however, to be fair and consistent if you allow staff flexibility during Euro 2016. For example, you may have staff of different nationalities who might want to watch their own countries in the same way that England fans will.

“And it’s not just about football, the same could apply to workers wanting to take time out to watch Wimbledon or the Rio Olympics, or attend music festivals or other social events. The key message is that if you apply a rule for one person, then it should be extended to all.”

* (Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire).
** England’s Euro clash with Wales could cost economy over £200m – Manchester Evening News 3rd June.

Euro 2016

Posted in About Chesterfield, Celebrate Chesterfield, Leisure, Summer, Visiting

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