Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Bournville" ¶ 27
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Bournville and School
Primary schools in the area include Bournville Junior School, Bournville Infant School and St Francis Primary School.
* 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
Schools include Bournville School and St Mary's CofE Primary School.
Born in Birmingham, England, he later went straight from Bournville Boys Technical School, later Bournville Grammar-Technical School for Boys, where he had appeared in many school dramatic productions including playing Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, to the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, with the assistance of a grant from the City of Birmingham.
BIAD includes the Bournville Centre for Visual Arts, the Birmingham School of Art and the School of Jewellery ( in the Jewellery Quarter ), which highlights the importance of jewellery manufacture in the city.
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.
* the Bournville Junior School ( 1902-5 ),
He attended Bournville Junior and Infant schools before going to King's Norton Boy's School.
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 is
The Society's patron is Her Majesty the Queen ; Lord Jordan of Bournville became RoSPA's president in 2008.
Bournville () is a model village on the south side of Birmingham, England, best known for its connections with the Cadbury family and chocolate – including a dark chocolate bar branded " Bournville ".
It is also a ward within the council constituency of Selly Oak and home to the Bournville Centre for Visual Arts.
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.
As Bournville is a conservation area, another job of the Bournville Village Trust is to accept or reject plans for building extension and modification.
The dark chocolate Bournville Plain is now manufactured in France and sold in the UK.
Bournville is an ethnically diverse community although ethnic minorities represent 10. 1 % ( 2, 474 ) of the ward's population as opposed to 29. 6 % for Birmingham.
Serco Integrated Services is the second largest employer in Bournville, employing approximately 1, 800 people.
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.
Bournville is served by Bournville College of Further Education, which features a sixth form college and higher education programmes.
Bournville is served by Bournville railway station on the Cross-City Line to Birmingham New Street, Lichfield and Redditch.
While other suburban Birmingham railway stations feature the yellow and green corporate livery of Centro, Bournville railway station is instead painted in Cadbury's purple.
Christian churches in Bournville include St Francis of Assisi Church which is also the Anglican parish church.
The Bournville Friends Meeting House is located on Linden Road, and features a bust of George Cadbury by Francis Wood, installed in 1924.
A tributory of Griffin's Brook flows through Northfield's Victoria Common and parallel to Heath Road South on its way to Bournville although it is piped underground now for most of its route since the 1970s, surfacing only briefly to feed the pond near Hole Farm Road, then in Woodlands Park and next near the Valley Pool boating lake, after which it joins up with Griffin's Brook proper which is then renamed the Bourn Brook until it flows into the River Rea.

Bournville and secondary
Dame Elizabeth Cadbury has a secondary school and sixth form named after her in Bournville.

Bournville and school
Laid out on the principles set out by Cadbury at Bournville, and developed mainly between 1865 and 1870, a public school was built with accommodation for 327 children.

Bournville and Birmingham
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.
Now containing 7, 800 homes on 1, 000 acres ( 4 km² ) of land with 100 acres ( 0. 4 km² ) of parks and open spaces, Bournville remains a popular residential area of Birmingham.
The 2001 Population Census found that 25, 462 people were living in Bournville with a population density of 4, 217 people per km² compared with 3, 649 people per km² for Birmingham.
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.
Bournville lies on the A4040, the ring road developed in the 1920s and served by the 11A and 11C Birmingham Outer Circle bus routes.
* Birmingham City Council: Bournville Ward
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.
As a social experiment it is similar to the model of the better-known Bournville company town founded by the Cadbury family near Birmingham, England, however it predates this development by more than 30 years.
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.
Bournville ( 1895 ) near Birmingham, was established by the Cadbury brothers, George and Richard.
* Bournville Village Trust, an organization in Bournville, a suburb of Birmingham, England
At the Bournville factory in Birmingham, in the UK, they are manufactured at a rate of 1. 5 million per day.
Billingham was born in Birmingham and studied as a painter at Bournville College of Art and the University of Sunderland.

Bournville and Education
Bournville College of Further Education have also taken part of the former factory site just off the Longbridge Lane / Bristol Road, over the road from the Technology Centre.

Bournville and area
Originally the area that was to become Bournville consisted of a few scattered farmsteads and cottages, linked by winding country lanes, with the only visual highlight being the Georgian built Bournbrook Hall.
The Cadburys named the area ' Bournville ' after the Bourn Brook ( now known as The Bourn ); with ' ville ' being French for ' town '; this set Bournville apart from the local area ( some people mistakenly believe Bournville was originally known as Bournbrook-Bournbrook exists as a separate area to the north of Bournville ).
Bournville had an area of 639. 8 hectares, and within this, it has a population density of 39. 8 people per hectare.
Cotteridge is an area of Birmingham, England and is part of the Bournville ward.
The name comes from the Bourn Brook, a tributary of the River Rea, which flows along the northern boundary of the area ( Bournville is named after a different Bourn ).
Bournville railway station serves the Bournville area of Birmingham, England.

0.135 seconds.