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Bournville and College
In 1988, the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design ( BIAD ) was established from the merging of the polytechnic's Faculty of Art and Design with Bournville College of Art.
Bournville is served by Bournville College of Further Education, which features a sixth form college and higher education programmes.
* Bournville School-Bournville School and sixth form centre is a coeducational, state comprehensive school, with Specialist Business and Enterprise College and Music College status, for students aged 11 – 19 years, located on Griffins Brook Lane, Bournville
Billingham was born in Birmingham and studied as a painter at Bournville College of Art and the University of Sunderland.
Birmingham has several colleges of further education funded primarily by the Learning and Skills Council, including City College, Josiah Mason College, Cadbury College, Queen Alexandra College, Bournville College, and Birmingham Metropolitan College.
Bournville College is relocating to Longbridge on the former site of the MG Rover works and is one of the first to regenerate the former factory.
Retail stores will account for over 150, 000 sq ft. An Austin Memorial Centre, The River Rea being bought back to the surface as a focal point in the centre of a newly formed 2 acre park called Austin Park, surrounded by the Bournville College campus and the new retail outlets and supermarket.
This is likely to result in the demolition of the former MG Rover training and learning development centre, currently held by Bournville College as a temporary construction campus.

Bournville and Education
Bournville School is a secondary school in the Birmingham Local Education Authority area.

Bournville and have
It is also noteworthy that, because George Cadbury was a temperance Quaker, no public houses have ever been built in Bournville ; however, since the late 1940s, there has been a licensed members ' bar at Rowheath Pavilion.

Bournville and also
Burnt mound sites such as that discovered in Bournville also show evidence of wider settlements, with clearances in the woodland and grazing animals.
It is also a ward within the council constituency of Selly Oak and home to the Bournville Centre for Visual Arts.
Cadbury's also built the Bournville indoor swimming baths on Bournville Lane ( separate buildings for ' girls ' and men ), the Valley pool boating lake and the picturesque cricket pitch adjacent to the factory site, that was made famous as the picture on boxes of Milk Tray chocolates throughout the 1950s and early 1960s.
Cadbury also named their brand of malted drinks Bournvita after Bournville.
Although Bournville is most famous for its turn-of-the-20th century Cadbury style homes, a significant amount of more modern stock also exists in the area — not all of which was built by Cadbury's.
Christian churches in Bournville include St Francis of Assisi Church which is also the Anglican parish church.
It also comes under the Selly Oak local council constituency, which is managed by its own district committee, and comprises both the Selly Oak ward as well as the wards of Billesley, Bournville and Brandwood.
It also links some 15 commercial centres, and passes Cadbury's in Bournville, one of the world's largest chocolate factories.
Where Pershore Road joins Hazelwell Road and Bournville lane there is the Three Horseshoes public house which already existed in 1836, there is also a large Cooperative store and a Cooperative Funeral home these were originally the Ten Acres & Stirchley Street Coperative Soiciety which first opened in 1875.
Cadburys also encouraged their workers to get involved in the social life of Bournville through the provision of sports facilities, athletic and cultural clubs, as well as social events such as summer parties.
It also comes under the Selly Oak local council constituency, which is managed by its own district committee, and comprises both the Selly Oak ward as well as the wards of Billesley, Bournville and Brandwood.
There are also smaller centres located in: Bournville ( Centre for Visual Arts, foundation awards and evening classes ) in the suburbs south of the city centre ; Margaret Street ( former Birmingham School of Art ) ( Fine Art ) in the city centre next to Birmingham Central Library and Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery ; and Vittoria Street ( School of Jewellery ) in the city's Jewellery Quarter.

Bournville and part
The Bournville Centre for Visual Arts, located at Ruskin Hall on Linden Road, has been part of the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design ( BIAD ) at Birmingham City University since 1988.
Under the 2013 review the Boundary Commission of England has proposed that Birmingham Selly Oak be abolished, with Selly Oak ward becoming part of Birmingham Edgbaston, Bournville part of Birmingham Northfield, and Billesley and Brandwood becoming part of Birmingham Hall Green.
* Bournville ( currently part of Birmingham Selly Oak )
Cotteridge is an area of Birmingham, England and is part of the Bournville ward.

Bournville and factory
Located next Stirchley Road railway station, which itself was opposite the canal, they renamed the estate Bournville and opened the Bournville factory the following year.
After the war, the Bournville factory was redeveloped and mass production began in earnest.
During World War II, parts of the Bournville factory were turned over to war work, producing milling machines and seats for fighter aircraft.
The exception proved the rule: even greenfield factory sites such as Bournville, founded in a rural setting, developed its own housing and profited from convenient communications systems.
Some philanthropists had begun to provide housing in tenement blocks, while some factory owners built entire villages for their workers, such as Saltaire ( 1853 ), Bournville ( 1879 ), Port Sunlight ( 1888 ), Stewartby, and Silver End as late as 1925.
Kings Norton, along with many of the small towns near Birmingham, expanded considerably in the 19th century with a railway link into Birmingham passing by the new Bournville factory just to the north.
Local work was plentiful, especially at the Austin Motor Works at Longbridge and, for the women, at Cadbury's chocolate factory in Bournville or the Kalamazoo paper factory in Longbridge, which had been moved to the area by Oliver Morland and F. Paul Impey in 1913 from central Birmingham.
At the Bournville factory in Birmingham, in the UK, they are manufactured at a rate of 1. 5 million per day.
They are driven to various places to advertise the eggs but are based mainly at the Cadbury factory in Bournville.
1900: Bournville Village Trust is founded by George Cadbury, this is to set many improvements and high standards of living and leisure pastimes for factory workers across Britain.
There, he found inspiration in Bournville, the garden town which the Cadbury family ( owners of the chocolate factory ) had built for their workers.
The Cadbury plc chocolate factory is still adjacent to the station, reflected in the fact that Bournville station is partly painted in Cadbury purple, and station signs include the famous Cadbury logo, a reflection of the station providing ideal access for Cadbury World.

Bournville and just
Born into an artistic family, Harvey studied architecture at the Municipal School of Art in Birmingham, and was appointed by George Cadbury to work on houses in Bournville in 1895 aged just 20.

Bournville and Lane
On 25 June 1911, Bournville Lane Baths were opened to the public by King's Norton and Northfield Urban District Council.
In an initial land rental agreement with the Worcester and Birmingham Canal, the station sits above Bournville Lane, as the tracks are on an embankment, shared with the canal.
The main station entrance, via the ticket office on Bournville Lane, only provides access to the platforms via steep steps.

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