Menu & Search
This page gives you access to a searchable and growing list of places and topics that will be of interest.
Each feature includes maps/trails, a gallery, links and contacts.
Search by passion or scroll and explore our features
Between Harborne Road and Hagley Road at Five Ways is the statue of Joseph Sturge. Sturge campaigned to abolish slavery in the 19th century. The statue dates to 1862.
Map of site.
View feature
The bronze Faraday statue is located at the West Gate of the University of Birmingham. It was donated on the Centenary of the University by the artist Sir Eduardo Paolozzi (1924 - 2005).
Queensgate Square will deliver 199 studio, one- to three-bedroom apartments and duplexes, including affordable housing, across three buildings.
Icknield Square is a canalside community set to introduce 234 one-, two-, and three-bed build-to-rent homes across several interlinked new builds.
The second statue to be unveiled in Birmingham was of Sir Robert Peel in 1855 in what was then Council House Square. It was later moved to Calthorpe Park in 1927, then to Tally Ho! in 1963.
Rowheath Playing Fields in Bournville. Between Bournville Lane, Selly Oak Road and Heath Road. Football is played by many teams on Sunday's.
1 Brindleyplace is to be refurbished and upwardly extended to deliver attractive, flexible office/education uses (9,654 > 10,129 sqm).
Quay Place on Broad Street
The Broad Street Presbyterian Church was built from 1848 to 1849. By 1929 it became the Second Church of Christ Scientist. Now a nightclub, it was Flares but now Popworld.
90 metres each located at Holloway Circus on Suffolk Street Queensway
St Stephen's Church is located Selly Park, Birmingham at Serpentine Road. Architects was Martin & Chamberlain and built during 1870-71. Was restored around 2014-15.
Birmingham Pride 2022 took place over the weekend of the 24th and 25th September 2022. The parade started at Centenary Square and went towards Southside via Victoria Square on 24/09/2022.
Following the visit of Horatio Nelson to Birmingham in 1802, and his death at the Battle of Trafalgar in October 1805, Birmingham got a statue of him in 1809 by Richard Westmacott.
The Wattilisk was unveiled in 1987 outside of the Queen Elizabeth II Law Courts. It was sculpted by Vincent Woropay. It depicts James Watt and others.
Five Ways Tower is unnoccupied as a result of 'Sick Building Syndrome'
The Taylor & Challen development consists of the restoration & conversion of the former lathe workshop on Constitution Hill.
Metropolitan House at Five Ways
Broadway building is to be partially converted to provide office, research, development, and light industrial usages for The Binding Site.
Between the 2nd and the 18th of September 2022, Birmingham hosted an amazing garden full of colour, beauty and natural diversity called PoliNations which has opened up many conversations.
The Tea Factory is to become an 84K SF state-of-the-art broad centre for BBC – their greenest ever building.
The Equestrian Statue of King George I is outside of the Barber Institute of Fine Arts. Originally for Dublin, Ireland in the early 18th century. It was brought to Birmingham in 1937.
Villa Park will see its capacity increased to over 50,000, creating a world-class sporting venue for the city.
The Hazelwell is a public house in Stirchley on Hazelwell Fordrough and Pineapple Road. Not far from Vicarage Road. There has been a pub on this site in Mock Tudor style since the 1930s.
Garrison Circus will redevelop a brownfield site with c. 546 homes and c. 710 student beds across four blocks up to c. 37 storeys.
Birmingham International Station is on the West Coast Mainline between Birmingham New Street and Coventry and onto London Euston. It opened in 1976 and is used for Birmingham Airport / NEC.
Select a passion of interest and view the posts. The number of passion points gathered shows what your community is passionate about.