The government has launched the first ever UK Town of Culture competition, giving places across the country the chance to showcase what makes them special, celebrate local culture, and bring investment into community events and creativity.
Many residents strongly value Lymm remaining a village, with its unique character and identity — and that’s really important to say upfront. Applying wouldn’t mean changing who we are, or turning Lymm into something it isn’t. The scheme is about celebrating local culture and pride in place, whatever form that takes.
Culturally, Lymm already has a lot to be proud of:
• The May Queen Festival, a long-standing tradition loved by generations
• The Lymm Festival, celebrating music, arts, history and community over 10 days
• Historic Transport Day, bringing visitors and families together
• The Duck Race, Dickensian Christmas, Morris dancing, heritage events and exhibitions
• A strong network of volunteers, community groups, artists and organisers who make things happen year after year
What’s on offer
• An initial Expression of Interest (no full bid straight away)
• Shortlisted places receive £60,000 to develop ideas
• The overall winner gets £3 million to deliver a cultural programme
• Two runners-up receive £250,000
Options for Lymm:
Should Lymm explore applying, or is this not right for us?
If we did, what parts of village life and culture should be highlighted?
How do we make sure any bid reflects Lymm’s identity and values?