Creativity & consumerism: how to spend a weekend in Birmingham, England
21.07.2023 - 08:01
/ roughguides.com
If we told you that Birmingham, the industrial powerhouse of the UK in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, had more than six million trees, you probably wouldn’t believe us. If we said it had more parks than any other European city, you might question our judgement.
But you had better believe Birmingham holds some surprising secrets. And the greenery in this West Midlands city is just one of the many reasons that it’s our December city break of the month. Here’s the lowdown on where to eat, sleep and shop ‘til you drop in Birmingham.
Because it’s on the up – and it has been for a while. Back in 2015, we chose Birmingham as a top city to travel to in 2015 for its burgeoning creative quarter and major railway station renovation. Now the New Street Station redevelopment is complete and Digbeth, the city’s artsy epicentre is as eclectic and colourful as ever.
It’s not the grey, industrial landscape you might imagine it to be. There’s plenty of green space, novel use of old warehouses and some innovative architecture – see the Library of Birmingham in Centenary Square, or the exterior of Selfridges, which is decorated with 15,000 aluminium discs.
© BCFC/Shutterstock
If you’re into art and museums, there’s the excellent Barber Institute of Fine Arts on the Birmingham University campus – stop by The Plough in Harborne for a hearty breakfast first – or, in the centre of town, the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery has over 40 exhibitions ranging from social history, archaeology and ethnography.
But, arguably, the biggest attraction in Birmingham is its shopping. You can find retail giants and high-street shops in the enormous Bull Ring Shopping Centre, plus the newly-opened Grand Central, which has over 40 shops and sits directly above New Street station. The city is also famous for its eclectic and historic markets – it was the first city in England to legally hold a weekly market. But there’s far more to retail in this city than big labels and fruit stalls…
Take a tour of the Jewellery Quarter, northwest of the centre, where inside over 200 listed buildings silversmiths and jewellers make hand-crafted jewellery to specification. It’s a wonderfully preserved area, where the streets are lined with charming, old red-brick houses and shops, and the city’s last-remaining Georgian square provides a peaceful escape from the busy centre. There are over a hundred independent specialist jewellery retailers, ranging from the more traditional to contemporary, cutting-edge designers.
Explore the city and its haunted stories on an interactive treasure hunt. Solve clues on your phone while discovering the city center from St. Philip's Cathedral over New Street to Baskerville House and more.
Another attraction in Birmingham