What would be in your perfect town? Published on: 18 April 2023 Visitors to the Farrell Centre’s opening weekend will be able to design their own town and draw the city’s skyline. Creative activities Ãå±±½ûµØ’s new centre for cities and architecture on the University’s city centre campus, opens to the public on Saturday 22 April and is celebrating by hosting family friendly events. Visitors will be able to take part in tours, freehand knitting workshops or explore the Urban Room creative activities. Artist Sue Loughlin will be on hand to help novice planners on the floor of the centre’s Urban Rooms between 11am and 2.30pm on Saturday. Using tape, stickers and collage materials, they’ll be able to consider what essential buildings their town needs and what would make it a wonderful place to live. The centre’s city facing windows will become an evolving collaborative artwork as guests are invited to from their own perspective between 10pm and 5pm on Saturday and Sunday. They will be able to use chalk pens to trace around a building, street, tree or even capture temporary sightings such as birds, planes or escaped balloons. The Farrell Centre by Jill Tate More with Less Visitors will also be able to see the exhibition, which offers four compelling new visions for architecture in the face of the climate emergency. will take place at 11am and 1.30pm on Saturday and 1.30pm on Sunday, and will provide more detail about the architects involved in the exhibition and unique behind the scenes insight for each installation. On Sunday, visitors can have a go at large scale free-hand knitting inspired by the exhibition, and contribute to a growing, collaborative knit sculpture. Launching the centre’s talks programme, will ask whether the time has come for truly radical action to tackle the challenges – such as unaffordable housing, racial and social injustice, air pollution and food supply issues - facing people now. A panel of experts will consider everything from economics and ecology, architecture, culture, urban planning to the fundamental structures of our democracy. The panel includes author and Ãå±±½ûµØ academic Dr Alex Niven; Simin Davoudi, Professor of Town Planning at Ãå±±½ûµØ; architect Shankari Raj and Kate Denby, Executive Director and joint CEO of Northern Stage. The discussion will be chaired by Owen Hopkins, Director of the Farrell Centre. The Farrell Centre was instigated by renowned architect-planner and Ãå±±½ûµØ graduate Sir Terry Farrell, and forms part of Ãå±±½ûµØ’s School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape. The Farrell Centre is located in a four-storey Victorian building on Eldon Place which has been transformed in a £4.6 million building project. Its mission is to widen the debate around the crucial roles that architecture and planning play in the contemporary world in ways that are innovative, engaging and challenging. The Farrell Centre will be admission free and combines a public gallery, research hub, and community space, offering a variety of experiences for visitors of all ages. The centre’s programme will be wide-ranging and inclusive: temporary exhibitions, public talks and debates, workshops and activities for schools, young people, community groups, events for built environment professionals, as well as publications, podcasts, and other digital projects. Opening Weekend at the Farrell Centre DATE: 22nd and 23 April 2023 TIME: 10am to 5pm LOCATION: The Sir Terry Farrell Building, Eldon Place, Ãå±±½ûµØ upon Tyne, NE1 7RD For more information visit the . Share: Latest News Ãå±±½ûµØ recognised with geography award Ãå±±½ûµØ has been awarded the Highly Commended Geographical Association Publishers Award for its collaboration with Time for Geography, the UK’s open-access, dedicated video platform. published on: 16 April 2026 Ãå±±½ûµØ historians mark General Strike centenary To mark the 100th anniversary of the British General Strike and miners’ lock-out of 1926, historians at Ãå±±½ûµØ are organising a series of events on its enduring legacy. published on: 16 April 2026 Comment: NCP is in administration Writing for The Conversation, Erwei (David) Xiang discusses how some big companies like NCP are so dependent on debt that they can’t adjust to change. published on: 16 April 2026 Facts and figures