Middleport Pottery - Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Poole/Freeman
N 53° 02.481 W 002° 12.587
30U E 552980 N 5877162
Middleport Pottery, a complex of Victorian pottery buildings located on Port Street in Burslem, received the Europa Nostra Award for Cultural Heritage Conservation in 2015.
Waymark Code: WMZ5XJ
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 09/15/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Where's George
Views: 1

Middleport Pottery in Burslem is the producer of Burleigh pottery. The Grade II* listed site is a red-brick maze, containing historic machinery, archives and historic collections. (visit link) (visit link)

The pottery was constructed in 1888, for Burgess & Leigh Limited, as a model factory for the production of what became the world-renowned “Burleigh” earthenware. (visit link)

The scale and linear organisation of the buildings on the site, rather than being haphazard, was designed to make all production processes more efficient and to improve conditions for the workforce. A crane, placed next to the packing house, enabled finished pottery to be placed straight onto barges on the Trent and Mersey Canal waiting to take the ceramics out to the coast for international export. Alternatively they were sent out by horse and cart via the road. (visit link)

In 2010 the cost of repairing the buildings was so great that the site had no viable operational future, and closure of the site was threatened.
In June 2011 The Prince’s Regeneration Trust / United Kingdom Historic Building Preservation Trust, (UKHBPT) stepped in to save this Victorian pottery from closure and to ensure that Burleigh pottery would continue to be produced in Burslem. They put together a private and public funding package that allowed the restoration and regeneration of the site. The regeneration of the site took three years and cost £9million, it was opened to the public in July 2014. It has resulted in the safeguarding of 50 local jobs and the creation of 66 more.

The restoration meant that Burleigh was able to remain on-site, saving local jobs and craftsmanship.
The unused buildings have been developed to provide accommodation for workshops, enterprise space, craft and community areas, a café, a gallery and a heritage visitor centre.

The new visitor experience at Middleport Pottery includes tours of the Burleigh factory, where visitors can see the handcraft techniques that have been used there since the 1800s. Visitors can also step inside the industrial bottle kiln, which has sights and sounds from the Pottery’s past, and can see the mould collection, which is the largest in Europe. The restored Victorian offices also display a collection of Burleigh ceramics from across the years.

"The factory too now has a secure future as one of the last surviving traditional potteries in the West Midlands of England, known as “The Potteries” and once characterised by its factory chimneys and distinctive bottle kilns. The techniques and skills of production have been revitalised and buildings and machinery carefully conserved to retain their unique atmosphere and spirit of place." Source: (visit link) (visit link)

The pottery was the filming location for The Great Pottery Throw Down. A television programme first broadcast on the BBC Two from 3rd November 2015. (visit link) (visit link)
The "Official Tourism" URL link to the attraction: [Web Link]

The attraction’s own URL: [Web Link]

Hours of Operation:
Visitor centre: Monday - Sunday: 10am - 4pm Café: Monday - Saturday: 9.30am - 4pm Sunday: 10.00am - 4pm Burleigh shop: Monday - Saturday: 9am - 5pm Sunday: 10am - 4pm


Admission Prices:
Adults £5.50 Children/young people 5 - 16s; Students (with a student card); senior citizens (over 65); local residents: £4 Under 5s Free


Approximate amount of time needed to fully experience the attraction: Half of a day (2-5 hours)

Transportation options to the attraction: Not listed

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