Advocating for high quality cultural & creative activity for children & young people

The CDCEP partnership brings together a diverse range of colleagues with a shared commitment to advocating for high quality creative and cultural activity with and for children and young people in County Durham

All Case Studies Posts

The Auckland Project

The Auckland Project has the regeneration of Bishop Auckland and its community at its heart. This means that social regeneration is valued just as deeply as economic. The work is ultimately about people - trying to help people in a genuine and reciprocal relationship.

Children carrying lanterns at the Crook Winter Light Parade

Jack Drum Arts

Extraordinary things happen in Crook, the market town where a carnival spirit needs little excuse to burst forth. Through creative projects, Jack Drum Arts has helped to lift people’s spirits while offering experiences and opportunities which wouldn’t otherwise be available to them.

Children dancing.

The Forge

A county’s cultural wellbeing can’t be gauged only by its flashy visitor attractions. Here, executive director Tony Harrington and creative producer Bev Briggs of The Forge talk about their work with schools and communities to inspire young people to become successful, confident individuals capable of reaching their full potential through contemporary participatory arts projects.

Locomotion

Locomotion, to be found down an apparent road to nowhere called Spout Lane in Shildon, is one of County Durham’s great delights – and a bit of a surprise to many people, you’d imagine. You can’t exactly stumble on the place but who would expect to find a national museum here, off that beaten track whose name (spout meaning ‘seam’ in these parts) reflects the town’s debt to coal?

Community lantern parade in Eldon on a winter evening

Northern Heartlands

Parades have returned to parts of County Durham that have suffered some hard knocks over the years. Just before Christmas hundreds of people turned out in Dene Valley to see a parade of lanterns made by local schoolchildren and others.