Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Firms offered £50,000 grants to revitalise city street

Grants of up to £50,000 are available to businesses in Sheffield to transform under-used spaces on the city’s Fargate.

The second round of funding, part of the ReNew Project, will support local businesses and organisations to revive empty shops and return vibrancy to areas of the city centre that have struggled in recent years.

The funding is available for prime locations on Fargate. Businesses from a wide range of customer facing industries are encouraged to apply, including food and beverage, retail, leisure, hospitality and arts and culture.

Fargate is at the centre of the Council’s plans to reimagine the city centre and will soon be home to Event Central, a year-round events and exhibition space, as well as transformational street renovations, including new pocket parks, seating areas and lighting.

The improvements and ReNew grants are funded by the £15.8m Future High Streets Fund which the Council successfully bid for in 2021.

As a result of the first round of ReNew project grants, Juno Books launched their brand new book shop on Chapel Walk.

They used the funding to renovate the property ready for opening with new flooring, bespoke hand painted signage as well as creating a wheelchair access counter and securing the shop with internal shutters.

Councillor Mazher Iqbal, Co-Chair of the Transport, Regeneration and Climate Policy Committee, said:“We recognise the need and desire to reinstate Fargate as a vibrant and social part of the city centre and the ReNew project is one of the many ways we hope to achieve this.

“With so many exciting businesses in the city, some just starting out and others keen to expand, it is critical we work with them to inject new life into the area – encouraging them to be creative in their plans and use this opportunity to try something new, expand or move to a central location.

“We are looking for projects that will have a long-lasting positive impact on the city centre and will benefit from the regeneration taking place.”

A message from the Editor:

Thank you for reading this story on our news site - please take a moment to read this important message:

As you know, our aim is to bring you, the reader, an editorially led news site and magazine but journalism costs money and we rely on advertising, print and digital revenues to help to support them.

With the Covid-19 pandemichaving a major impact on our industry as a whole, the advertising revenues we normally receive, which helps us cover the cost of our journalists and this website, have been drastically affected.

As such we need your help. If you can support our news sites/magazines with either a small donation of even £1, or a subscription to our magazine, which costs just £31.50 per year, (inc p&P and mailed direct to your door) your generosity will help us weather the storm and continue in our quest to deliver quality journalism.

As a subscriber, you will have unlimited access to our web site and magazine. You'll also be offered VIP invitations to our events, preferential rates to all our awards and get access to exclusive newsletters and content.

Just click here to subscribe and in the meantime may I wish you the very best.








Latest news

Related news