
Synopsis
Over the next decade Bristol City Centre and Frome Gateway regeneration areas will be undergoing their most significant period of change for a generation.
The City Centre (Broadmead area) will be evolving from primarily retail to an inclusive, sustainable and reconnected place for everybody ‘…with vibrant cultural facilities and a thriving evening economy, whilst at the same time somewhere to call home.’
Neighbouring Frome Gateway will be delivering thousands of new and improved homes, workspaces, and community and public space to better meet the needs of the local community and the city. Whilst also celebrating and re-connecting with an enhanced river Frome.
With multiple developments at scale coming forward across both areas which trigger Bristol City Council Public Art Policy, the council is encouraging an ambitious joined-up approach through a ten-year Public Art and Cultural Activation Strategy.
The strategy has been developed through an engaged process. It includes a menu of ideas to inspire and guide developers, strategic partners, and local groups wanting to initiate, fund-raise and work with artists and creatives on their own projects.

The Public Art and Cultural Activation Strategy 2025-35 is a call to action to ‘transform Bristol’s City Centre and Frome Gateway neighbourhoods to be filled with public life and creative activity for everyone. Celebrating what’s already here, welcoming communities and visitors of the present and future, nurturing nature, and growing skills and opportunities.’
It responds to place-based cultural and community requirements and recommendations in the strategies guiding the evolution of these different but adjacent neighbourhoods: the City Centre Development and Delivery Plan and the Frome Gateway Strategic Framework.
Aligned to public art and planning policy and Bristol’s new Local Plan, it is designed to guide multiple developers moving through the planning process on public art visioning and delivery, inspire local groups developing their own local initiatives, and build the foundations for longer term ambitious projects and strategic investment.
Public art and culture are seen as playing multiple intersected roles throughout the life of the regeneration programmes; engaging citizens, animating the high street and public realm through creative interventions and meanwhile activations alongside change and disruption, supporting vibrancy and visitor economy, testing ideas, imaginatively taking citizens on the journey as the area evolves, and creating spaces that welcome and celebrate a diverse city.
The economic value of arts and culture interventions has already been demonstrated in the City Centre area through the High Street Recovery programme where, for every £1 invested, £4.50 additional spend was generated.
The strategy has been devised through an engaged process bringing together developers, cultural organisations, artists and local stakeholders and proposes an ambitious joined up approach, with a menu of ideas ranging from smaller, quicker to achieve ideas to broad brush ambitious concepts realisable through strategic partnerships and co-investment in the future.
"Culture is the heart of placemaking, it is the joy that creates a sense of belonging. In regeneration, a culture driven approach ensures inclusive, vibrant places where people and nature coexist sustainably."Councillor Ani Stafford-Townsend, Lead for Culture

Vision for the City Centre
With 52% of the City Centre area being redeveloped to enable 2,500 new homes and at least 5,000 new residents, retail consolidated and re-imagined, and 62% of the road network impacted by initiatives to improve sustainable transport and enable installation of the city’s environmental Heat Network; the strategy considers the vital role of public art and cultural activation in a prolonged period of change and potential disruption for this regional centre as well as alongside construction and completion.
In the City Centre, public art and cultural activation needs to shift perceptions from disruption to transformation.
Bringing local communities, businesses, residents and visitors on the journey as a shopping quarter evolves into a diverse and mixed-use city centre.
Projects should animate a joyful public realm and find places for culture on ground floors, provide significant moments of welcome and wayfinding, connect with nature, and hardwire in positive social impact approaches.


"Have ambition, beauty, be extraordinary, mind-blowing – the wow factor."City Centre vision

Vision for Frome Gateway
The diversity and inclusivity of Frome Gateway’s community and mix of activities, it’s and re-connection with an enhanced river Frome, will be celebrated as the area’s greatest strengths and represent the foundations of its unique character and identity.
In Frome Gateway, public art and cultural activation needs to be a set of ‘co-created on common ground’ projects that focus on making the area more navigable, legible and convivial, while continuing to celebrate its ‘story of place’.
Projects should amplify Frome Gateway as an ‘engine house’ of cultural production, creative and maker spaces, address local social and economic inequalities, and seek to reconnect to the River Frome and make it part of the neighbourhood.
"Don’t forget to preserve the grassroots energy, inclusivity and accessibility that define existing spaces in Frome Gateway."Frome Gateway vision