Project Type: Press release

Christmas and weekly markets tender opportunity

by Southampton City Council

New tender opportunity to manage Christmas and weekly markets

Working in partnership with GO! Southampton and Southampton Forward, Southampton City Council is delighted to announce a new tender opportunity for experienced service providers to arrange, deliver and manage Southampton’s annual Christmas Market and weekly markets in the city centre and Bitterne from 2024 to 2028.

The opportunity opened on Friday 6 October and can be accessed online.

Southampton’s Christmas Market attracts residents and visitors from across the region and enables them to experience a range of festive and cultural activities as well as international foods, goods and crafts. It has become a popular event in the seasonal calendar and supports the local economy, boosting footfall, sales, small businesses, and creates new job opportunities.

Building on Southampton’s rich history of markets dating back to medieval times, the city council is also seeking a Service Provider to deliver a high-quality weekly market that complements the city centre offer and appeals to both residents and visitors.

The market should feature a wide variety of produce as well as hot and cold food and drinks. The market will offer a platform to support small and independent businesses in the area, helping to create a sense of community and support for local producers. It will also promote sustainable and ethical consumption by offering a range of products that meet these standards.

Councillor Satvir Kaur, Leader of Southampton City Council said:

Markets are an integral part of our city’s dynamic culture, serving as a hub for residents to support local businesses and discover exceptional food and goods. As the daughter of a market stall trader growing up I appreciate their value to our community. That’s why we’re delighted to invite Service Providers to join us in managing our markets, presenting a unique opportunity to participate in something special and enhance the market experience for all.

Stephen Manion, Executive Director at GO! Southampton said:

GO! Southampton welcomes the presence of a vibrant weekly market, which attracts residents and visitors to the city centre with its choice of fresh produce and showcase of local businesses. We look forward to working closely with the successful operator.

Claire Whitaker, CEO of Southampton Forward said:

This is an exciting opportunity for the city as well a new service provider, to come on board and enhance our Christmas offering. We are really pleased to be working in partnership with GO! Southampton and Southampton City Council on this opportunity and look forward to seeing how the new provider will be able to add to the city’s yearly events calendar, and provide the local community and visitors with a fantastic market.

The successful Service Providers will be responsible for delivering memorable experiences and successful markets that benefit businesses, visitors and residents. More information about these opportunities and how to submit a tender is available online:

Christmas Market

City Centre and Bitterne Market

Southampton receives £11.5 million of Arts Council England funding

Arts Council England (ACE) announced their investment in culture across the country today which sees Southampton successfully securing £3.88 million per year over the next three years.

New organisations that will be joining ACE National Portfolio Organisations (NPOs) are MAST Mayflower Studios, SoCo Music Project and Opera Up Close, whilst ‘a space arts’, Art Asia, John Hansard Gallery, Turners Simms and Zoie Logic Dance Theatre will continue to receive funding, as will Artswork who deliver activity across the region.

This additional investment into Southampton is a fantastic part of our legacy from Southampton’s bid to become the next UK City of Culture in 2025. Despite the title going elsewhere, the process put Southampton on the map and this increased funding shows ACE’s ongoing commitment to Southampton. 

Other recent ACE successes include a grant to visual art producer Katie Daley-Yates of Host Productions, who is commissioning two public art projects for Riverside Park and the surrounding neighbourhoods by local artists Sarah Filmer and Deborah Gearing. This was match-funded by Abri, The Southampton Collective CIC and Three Rivers Rail Partnership.

Alongside this announcement, the founding partners behind the UK City of Culture bid are in the process of transitioning to the Southampton Culture Trust and fundraising is underway to deliver on some of the activities that were developed as part of the bidding process, building on the extensive consultation which came from the generosity of people’s time, ideas and passion for the city.

Leader of the Council, Councillor Satvir Kaur said: 

Part of the reason to bid for City of Culture in the first place was to draw in more external investment into our city, so I am thrilled that our work during the bid process has resulted in such an uplift in regular ACE investment into our city, which will support local organisations that offer skills and opportunities to young people, grow local talent, and deliver great initiatives from tackling mental health to social isolation.  

We know that this was a tough and competitive funding round, and this uplift is an accolade of all the hard work put by city organisations and the creative sector in Southampton.

At a time when we need to grow our local economy and attract visitors to the city, this is very welcome news. We remain committed to delivering on our City of Culture bid legacy, that will continue to see more external investment coming into our city, put Southampton on the map, and create a place people want to live, work, study, visit and enjoy. 

Claire Whitaker CBE, CEO of Southampton Culture Trust said: 

It is fantastic to see investment coming to support Southampton’s cultural sector and the city being rewarded for placing culture at the heart of its vision for opportunity and growth.  As we establish the Southampton Culture Trust, we are placing support of the sector and building its capacity at the centre of our activity. Our first event, a conference to bring the city’s cultural sector back together, will be held early in 2023 and we look forward to building on the energy and commitment that has been unleashed over the last few years.

Southampton Forward Culture Conference

by Lee Peck Media

Culture and Change: a recap of the 2023 Southampton Forward Culture Conference

More than 350 delegates at a major conference in Southampton heard that the city had an “extraordinary opportunity” to make sure that culture and tourism were central to its growth and prosperity over the next decade.

This was the view of Bernard Donoghue OBE, the CEO of ALVA, the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, who was speaking at Southampton Forward, a free conference at MAST Mayflower Studios organised by the Southampton Culture Trust.

The one-day event had a packed programme including inspirational speeches, Q&As, workshops, networking and entertainment. Renowned poet Issa Farrah received a huge round of applause at the start of the day when he recited his latest work, simply entitled “Southampton,” which was especially commissioned for the conference. He said: “As long as people in this room keep talking we can make anything happen.”

Mr Donaghue made his remarks in a session entitled Driving Change, chaired by Lady Sue Hollick OBE, a trustee of Southampton Culture Trust. He said that one of the biggest challenges was to encourage the two million people who went through the city every year on cruises, to stay in the city and enjoy what it had to offer rather than being bussed to tourist destinations further afield. “Some cities would give their eye teeth for numbers like that,” he said.

He told a packed auditorium of representatives from the local community, cultural, creative industries, tourism & destination sectors that Southampton had an “extraordinary opportunity” to deliver something great for the people of the city, not simply for their economic prosperity but their social prosperity too.

“Two factors are at play,” he said. “The legacy of Southampton’s bid to become UK City of Culture in 2025 has brought together the community like never before. You can see the enthusiasm here today and that has got to be harnessed to deliver something really special.

“The other factor is that, as tragic as its effects were, the pandemic made people realise how important it was to value things like community groups, museums, heritage sites and theatre.

“The interesting thing is that subscriptions to places like these increased over the two years of the pandemic even though people couldn’t actually go out.” He then compared culture and the arts to the NHS saying they healed the soul and made people feel happier about themselves.

John Newbigin OBE, the Mayor of London’s Ambassador for Creative Industries, said rather than invent assets, the city should build on what already exists such as expanding Southampton’s waterfront which was “crying out for redevelopment.”

Professor Fraser Stuart, Professor of Archaeology at the University of Southampton, called for strong leadership locally to make sure things happened. And Carolyn Abel, Head of Culture and Tourism at Southampton City Council, said everyone had to pull together. “We have a wealth of knowledgeable and creative people in our city. We need to involve everyone, not simply tell people what to do. A holistic approach will work best. I think the three main factors driving a city forward are mission, mindset and mobilisation.”

In the session, ‘Spotlighting our Young People’, Leon Smith, the Participation Apprentice at Southampton City Council, said that his generation felt let down. He said they wanted to make their mark, but decision makers had to find new ways of engaging with them.

Alan Lane, the Artistic Director of Slung Low, spoke in the session Taking the Lead. He said: “The key to engaging local communities was giving away as much power as possible while still retaining responsibility.”

Meanwhile Professor Tom Shakespeare, CBE, from the London Scholl of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: “There is real challenge around disabilities and the inclusion of people with visible and invisible disabilities as leaders is critical. “Invest in the right people, let them work out what they want and be willing to fail.”

The keynote speaker was Phil Gibby, South West Area Director for the Arts Council England (ACE). Last month Southampton’s Culture Trust secured a £1.57m grant, paid over three years, from ACE as part of its National Lottery Project Grants Place Partnerships Fund. It followed an announcement late last year from ACE of an additional £11.5m investment in the city’s culture and creativity to support the sector over the next three years.

Mr Gibby said his role was to radiate optimism about the city’s future. He said: “The city is a cultural powerhouse of 250,000 people with untapped potential.

“Local research showed that 8/10 people thought the City of Culture bid was very worthwhile and what you’ve managed to do is create networks that will last a generation. I sense the floodgates of talent are about to burst open.”

He added: “Southampton has a huge opportunity ahead of it so it’s vitally important to build on the work done so far. Most of all though remain authentic and seize the opportunity.”

Southampton Culture Trust’s CEO Claire Whitaker CBE said: “Today’s conference was a huge success and met with great enthusiasm. Crucially it was an important step forward in Southampton’s journey in transforming the city and region through a significant investment in culture, festivals, events and tourism.

“We were thrilled to see so many people from Southampton’s diverse and thriving cultural scene working together to explore how we can make huge changes through our cultural offerings.” She concluded by saying that the full text of Southampton’s City of Culture bid will be published on the Culture Trust’s website on Monday.

Welcoming delegates at the start of a full programme Satvir Kaur, the leader of Southampton  City Council, said: “People ask me if it was worth putting the City of Culture bid together. I say Yes, without doubt. It has brought the city together like never before and rightly put Southampton in the national spotlight.

“Now, more than ever, we need to support our city and allow local people and communities to benefit from its growth. This conference was the perfect way to ignite the spirit of Southampton and take us forward to a successful future.”