
Ilkeston Charter Fair set to be extended
Plans to extend a town's four-day fair, believed to be one of the longest-running in Europe, have been approved.Ilkeston Charter Fair, in Derbyshire, was established by Henry III in 1252 and is set to return in October.The fair sees rides and stalls take over the town centre with a royal charter read out by the mayor at the official opening.The Showmen's Guild made a formal request last year to Erewash Borough Council for rides to continue for one extra day, which the authority said would "bring additional economic and cultural value to the borough".
The fair currently runs from Wednesday to Saturday but would be extended to Sunday this year, with opening hours from 13:00 to 20:00.According to a council report, the Showmen's Guild has proposed a "quiet time" on the extra day where the lights and music from the rides will be switched off between 13:00 to 14:30 to make the fair "more inclusive and reduce noise pollution".
'Rejuvenate the economy'
Residents were consulted over the proposal last year with the majority supporting the permanent change.The authority, which has helped run the event since 1974, said: "The Charter Fair has been taking place in Ilkeston for over 750 years and delivers a rich cultural tradition during October of entertainment to the people of Erewash."The extension will deliver the corporate strategy aims to rejuvenate the local economy through bringing additional footfall into the town centre during the week of the fair and supporting our communities."The council added the change requires approval from the home secretary once they have received representation showing it should go ahead "for the convenience and advantage of the public".A previous plan to extend the fair was rejected by the council in 2019.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
2 days ago
- BBC News
Long Eaton regeneration projects face further delays
Several multimillion-pound regeneration projects in Long Eaton have been delayed by several Borough Council was given £25m of government funding to rejuvenate the town more than five years all but one of the projects are still in their pre-construction for all of the schemes in the Town Deal must be spent by March 2026 or it faces being pulled back by central government. They must be completed in full by March 2027. A meeting of the Long Eaton Town Board heard that construction of the listed building next to Long Eaton Town Hall has been extended by four months because of defective designs, with completion now set for August rather than Stable Block building is set to become a modern working hub with new office and workshop space. The Britannia Mills Bridge, which will form part of an improved pedestrian and cycling network, now faces a six-month delay and will begin in September this year, with completion set for March 2026. Starting works at Broad Street Bridge, connecting West Park with the town centre over Erewash Canal, also faces delays. Work was originally mooted to begin in January but has been delayed again from July to August while further cost benefit analysis is completed but with no knock-on delay to completion expected. The project to revitalise Long Eaton's high street has faced "unexpected queries" from Derbyshire Highway Authority, according to the council, resulting in of works, estimated to cost about £10m, will not happen until July 2026, instead of June. This date however has been bought forward than the original October 2026 estimate for will begin in September this year. Meanwhile the former Galaxy Row cinema, where demolition work began in May, has also faced another round of will begin its development stage in September this year, a month after the time it was originally mooted to be latest slowdown will see the project, which will see the site turned into shops and flats, now expected to be completed in December 2026 instead of October.A project to improve lighting in West Park to encourage walking and cycling was completed last year. 'Challenges to overcome' The leader of Erewash Conservatives Wayne Major said the delays were "a real concern"."While it's positive that there's now some leeway from government on deadlines, that flexibility should be used to get projects over the line, not to drift further behind."Keeping to budget and timeline is essential if we're going to make the most of this funding." A spokesperson for Erewash Borough Council said: "The Town Deal continues to be a massive project for the borough council. Like almost all the other such schemes across the country we have had challenges to overcome along the way."The conditions set by the Towns Fund is for all projects to be in contract by the end of March 2026 – with projects completed by the end of March 2027. We are well on track to achieve this."


BBC News
17-05-2025
- BBC News
Former public toilets in Ilkeston being turned into snack bar
A former public toilet building in Derbyshire is being transformed into a snack Booth, who always dreamed of opening her own snack bar, is aiming to change the loos at Gallows Inn Fields, in Ilkeston, into a sandwich bar and deli within five mum-of-three, who lives in Ilkeston, said she spotted that Erewash Borough Council was offering to lease the building and decided to pursue her dreams of opening a snack bar."We saw this place pop up and thought it would be absolutely ideal," said Ms Booth. The refurbishment of the toilets, which closed almost two years ago, has so far seen Ms Booth and her partner Ellis remove 34 tonnes of Howard, councillor for town centres, regeneration and planning, said: "We are delighted that Carly is putting what is actually a rather attractive building to good use – and wish her the very best."


BBC News
15-05-2025
- BBC News
'Scruffy' shops to be tackled across Erewash towns
Erewash Borough Council says it is launching a "blitz" on run down shops which "blight" Ilkeston and Long Eaton town Derbyshire authority said teams were inspecting shopping streets to identify "scruffy or neglected" empty and trading units could face action, warned the council, which said while it will work with owners it can also "compel" repairs to orders have already been issued to unnamed property owners in Long Eaton, the authority said. Curtis Howard, councillor for town centres, regeneration and planning, said legal notices could be served on buildings in a poor don't want to do that but we have a duty to act on behalf of residents where buildings have become an eyesore that blight the town centre," he said. 'Take action' The action follows government-funded schemes in Long Eaton including town centre work to build a new square along High Street, added seating and green spaces, additional parking and a trail in tribute to artist Dame Laura in Long Eaton also includes a scheme to build a new canal bridge, and the demolition of the former Galaxy Cinema to make way for new shops and Ilkeston, the council said it was working with the owner of the former Argos in Bath Street to secure funding to convert the site into two retail units and 11 said: "One of the priorities is to take action to improve our town centres."That includes ensuring that the best use is made of the opportunities for new businesses to move in – while encouraging property owners to maintain their buildings."