Save the National Glass Centre’s open letter to Rt. Hon. Lisa Nandy

Send a version of this letter to your own MP and to Lisa Nandy.



November 2024 

Rt. Hon. Lisa Nandy

Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport

House of Commons

London

SW1A 0AA

enquiries@dcms.gov.uk 

Dear Ms. Nandy,

On behalf of our campaign group, “Save the National Glass Centre”, we extend our warmest congratulations on your recent appointment as Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport. We were heartened to hear your speech at the Royal Television Society recognising the importance of the creative industries outside of London and noting that Jonathan Reynolds, no stranger to Sunderland, is putting the creative industries at the centre of your industrial strategy.  As you said, “Talent is everywhere but jobs are not”.  It was kind of you to mention the beauty of Sunderland in relation to the filmmaking industry, and the same can certainly be said of Sunderland’s longstanding glass making industry.

As publicly speaking out is “critical to a healthy, functioning democracy” we, the people, are appealing to you directly in an open letter…

Save the National Glass Centre

Stop the University from breaking the glass heart of Sunderland

Immediate action is required to prevent the loss of Sunderland’s much loved “world-class cultural asset”. 

Our calls for action are,

  1. An immediate stop is put to the University of Sunderland’s closure, demolition and relocation plans for the National Glass Centre (NGC).  
  2. An independent review into the situation is commissioned to establish the facts and consider alternatives other than demolition and the destruction of our internationally renowned, unique cultural asset.
  3. That the people who care for, use, value, cherish and, let’s face it, have collectively paid for the NGC are central to the decision-making process.
  4. That our campaign group are given the opportunity to present our evidence-based solutions which can ensure a sustainable future for our NGC, for our glassmaking cultural heritage and, most importantly, for our future generations.

Although the NGC is currently under the ownership of the university it was conceived as a public asset central to the regeneration of that area of Sunderland. It was paid for and supported by several organisations but principally British and European taxpayers.  The university assumed full ownership through the collaboration of Arts Council England (ACE) and Sunderland Council. 

The university has shown “violent indifference” to our exceptional cultural and educational venue and has decided to demolish the NGC thereby ending 1350 years of glassmaking in Sunderland.  The decision was taken using biased, partial evidence. There was no public consultation, no reference to the fate of the complex cultural ecosystem surrounding the NGC and no consideration of the economic damage caused by the loss of the approximately 230000 visitors the NGC used to host annually (source: Sunderland Culture). Since the shock announcement 18 months ago, there is still no coherent plan to save and relocate the many and varied creative activities housed within the building, including the Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art. Millions of pounds of embodied public funds will disappear if the university is successful in its development plans.

Save the National Glass Centre

We are a group of local and nationally based people with a wide variety of experiences and professional qualifications. Collectively, we believe that the NGC can survive and thrive if the community, politicians, other interested organisations and the university work together in a spirit of positive engagement to create an ambitious, sustainable future. We are determined to challenge the averted gaze and lack of curiosity that has characterised the response of the public office holders accountable and answerable for this matter.  As of this date, our elected representatives, Councillors and Members of Parliament, have been unsuccessful in holding the university to account so we are appealing to you directly as a group with the backing of over 35700 petitioners from 72 countries. 

As a campaign group we have assembled a comprehensive evidence base containing many deeply troubling facts and unanswered questions, and we would welcome the opportunity to discuss this situation with you. 

Your predecessors at the DCMS have been made aware of this matter, following enquiries from HRH King Charles and local politicians. In October 2023 Lord Parkinson wrote,

 “…this is very much a live issue so we do not believe launching an inquiry would be productive at this stage.”  

Do we have to wait until after the destruction of the National Glass Centre before this scandal is examined?

We await your response with anticipation,

Yours sincerely,

Signed on behalf of the Campaign to Save the National Glass Centre.

Save the National Glass Centre News and Updates July 2024

Hello everyone,

It has now officially been a year since the public meeting in June 2023 when we managed to pull together an A team of people to fight to save the National Glass Centre and all it embodies. I just want to take a moment to thank every single one of you for your ongoing hard work, hope and solidarity. I definitely would not have gotten this far without you all!

Tonight at the meeting we will look at the business plan, talk about Summer Streets, and update everyone about the letter writing campaign. 

Next in-person meeting:
Tuesday 2nd July 2024 6.30pm to 8pm 

At our new venue: 

Redby Community Centre, Fulwell Rd, Roker, Sunderland SR6 9QU

Save the National Glass Centre

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News
Summer Streets

Saturday 6th and Sunday 7th July 

10am set up 7.30pm take down we will need some hands to help man the tent and raise awareness for the cause including getting lots of petitions signed!

https://www.summerstreetsfestival.com/

Vessels of Memory

Dive into the history of glass ships in bottles – the changing identity of a post-industrial northern city as told through the eyes of Japanese glass artist Ayako Tani, who is preserving the endangered art of sculpting the hand-crafted glass ships which once put Sunderland on the map.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0020h9y

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Thursday June 20, 2024 | by Emma Park

SPECIAL REPORT: The Battle to Save the National Glass Centre

https://urbanglass.org/glass/detail/special-feature-saving-the-national-glass-centre

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Grow our YouTube by liking the videos and subscribing to the channel

We need you – Save the National Glass Centre

We have put a call out for more people to get involved with the campaign. If you really want to save the National Glass Centre we are going to need more commitment, and people to help. Please share with those who you think can help!

If everyone could follow, like, and share the content it will have more impact.

These are our social media accounts:

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100095647892577   Facebook

https://www.instagram.com/savethenationalglasscentre/  Instagram

https://www.youtube.com/@SavetheNationalGlassCentre/videos   YouTube

https://twitter.com/SaveTheNGC  Twitter

See you at the next meeting!

All the best 

Jo 

Save the National Glass Centre Campaign

Vessels of Memory

A BBC radio documentary about glass ships in bottles. Dr Ayako Tani takes us through the decline of traditional glassmaking skills.

BBC Vessels of memory

Dive into the history of glass ships in bottles – the changing identity of a post-industrial northern city as told through the eyes of Japanese glass artist Ayako Tani, who is preserving the endangered art of sculpting the hand-crafted glass ships which once put Sunderland on the map.

Following industrial decline in the 1970s and the closure of the Pyrex factory, many of Sunderland’s newly redundant scientific glassblowers turned their talents to giftware, and from the ashes of a former glassblowing empire this new booming practice emerged. But today, scientific glassblowing is considered an endangered craft, and with Sunderland’s own National Glass Centre now facing imminent closure, the art of glass is once again under strain.

After arriving from Tokyo in 2006 to Sunderland, a city famous for its all-but-lost legacies of shipbuilding and glassblowing, Ayako discovered a passion for documenting the history of glass ships in bottles. Vessels of Memory follows Ayako’s journey of discovery, learning from Sunderland’s now mostly retired glassworkers and engineers who once pioneered these ornamental giftware ships sold worldwide. 

Ayako was inspired to research and recreate her own glass ships in bottles, and keep the memory of this once booming industry alive. Hear the deconstruction of a glass ship in bottle, as Ayako guides you through experiences that have shaped her journey exploring and learning this fragile, endangered heritage, alongside those who taught and inspired her.

Featuring the voices of Keith Clark, Catherine Forsyth, Zoë Garner, Keith Hartley, Jo Howell, Brian Jones, James Maskrey, Joseph Percy, Christine Sinclair, Ayako Tani, Andy Thompson, and Norman Veitch.

Producer: Jay Sykes
A Sister Sounds production for BBC Radio 4