Disaster planning: North Staffs

Notes

[1] The Coal Authority (2022) ‘Interactive Map

[2] Price, C. (1966) ‘Potteries Thinkbelt‘, New Society, 2 June

[3] Price, C. (1966) ‘Potteries Thinkbelt‘, Architectural Design, October

[4] Bould, S. (2020) ‘Old pictures of Tunstall from the Bert Bentley Archive‘, Stoke Sentinel

[5] Bould, S. (2020) ‘Bert Bentley Archive: These pictures show Burslem in the 1960s (Part2)‘, Stoke Sentinel

[6] Bould, S. (2020) ‘The changing face of Hanley in the 1970s – amazing pictures from the James Morgan archive‘, Stoke Sentinel

[7] Bould, S. (2020) ‘Photographer James Morgan – who travelled around Stoke-on-Trent on a bike – captures images from the city in the 70s‘, Stoke Sentinel

[8] Bould, S. (2020) ‘Fascinating pictures from the Bert Bentley Archive showing the streets of Fenton (part 2)‘, Stoke Sentinel

[9] Bould, S. (2020) ‘Old pictures of Longton from the Bert Bentley Archive (part one)‘, Stoke Sentinel

[10] Bould, S. (2020) ‘21 outstanding pictures from Newcastle in the 1960s taken by photographer Bert Bentley‘, Stoke Sentinel

[11] Price, C. (2000) quoted in Hardingham, S. and Rattenbury, K. (2007) ‘Supercrit #1 Cedric Price: POTTERIES THINKBELT’

[12] Price, C. (1966) ‘Potteries Think Belt: A plan for the establishment of a major advanced educational industry in North Staffordshire’, in the Cedric Price fonds at the Canadian Centre for Architecture

[13] Price, C. [ib. 11]

[14] Fellows, N. (2022) ‘Disaster planning: North Staffs‘, Archiblog on YouTube

[15] Proudlove, D. (2019) ‘“Could Potteries be a World Heritage site?”‘, Stoke Sentinel

[16] Mathews, S. (2007) ‘From Agit-Prop to Free Space: The Architecture of Cedric Price’

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