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Coventry transformed

Shaking off its old image, the 2021 City of Culture looks very different this year

June 20, 2021 16:02
pa_coventry_city_culture_87 CREDIT PA
EDITORIAL USE ONLY Cofa's Tree an installation of coloured ribbons, printed with the hopes and aspirations of the city and flags that have been created by local children from 76 schools in the city, part of Coventry UK City of Culture's signature event. Picture date: Saturday June 5, 2021. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Doug Peters/PA Wire
5 min read

When Coventry was awarded City of Culture for 2021, scoffs were heard across the country. It seems that once you are publicly labelled a ‘Ghost Town’ — as local band The Specials did in their haunting 1981 hit — it is a difficult image to shake off.

The Specials were addressing issues being felt across the UK, but which came to define Coventry. Having suffered the closure of its industries, both in mining and car manufacturing, the city struggled to form a new identity. Its people were suffering unemployment and deprivation.

The bombed-out centre became emblematic of the folly of post-war city planning, as designers chose to create a new ‘modern’ town, rather than rebuild the picturesque medieval lanes.

But that was then: Coventry is changing. In fact, the Coventry I moved to five years ago is almost unrecognisable compared to the one that you’ll see today. Entire districts have popped up, housing the thousands of students that call the city home during term time, while a burgeoning new food and nightlife scene has revitalised the centre.