From the
TEDxGrantham desk.
Updates from the organising team: speaker reveals, behind-the-scenes notes, and longer-form pieces on ideas worth spreading.
How Grantham keeps memory and kindness alive
In early 2011, local volunteers formed the Grantham Community Heritage Association to reopen Grantham Museum after closure for the Queen’s Jubilee. The town’s memory and kindness now run through volunteer routes at the museum, the hospital and the foodbank.
By TEDx Grantham Team

Why Grantham changes on foot and on market day
Grantham’s Saturday market still fills the Market Place, Narrow Westgate and Butcher’s Row, while a 1.8-mile heritage walk links St Wulfram’s, the Guildhall and the Market Cross. Together, they show how a town centre becomes more legible and more social at walking pace.
By TEDx Grantham Team
Grantham culture and work trends
Grantham's cultural strength lies in usable heritage rather than heritage on display: the Guildhall doubles as an arts venue and visitor-information point, Gravity Fields turns Isaac Newton's local links into a participatory science-and-arts festival that engaged 1,500 young people, and the Westgate Hub houses community and performing-arts groups in the town centre. That use also feeds the local visitor economy. Job searches in Grantham circle around care, public services, retail, logistics and visitor-facing roles, with part-time work and 'no experience needed' postings far more common than fully remote opportunities, so flexible local work continues to outweigh remote work.
By TEDx Grantham Team

Do small grants make innovation visible in Grantham
Small grants under South Kesteven's Business Growth Grant — typically £2,500 to £15,000 with 50% match funding — make innovation in Grantham easier to see when they fund concrete change such as new equipment, software upgrades, staff training or safeguarded jobs, rather than vague promises. They sit between an idea and a loan, helping firms move past the first hopeful stage by sharing risk while still demanding their own investment. Selection rules and paperwork — business plans, forecasts and confirmed co-funding — shape which firms benefit, often favouring those with cash reserves or adviser support. The scheme reveals practical change but also filters who reaches it.
By TEDx Grantham Team

How Grantham tests ideas and carries learning forward
Grantham tests ideas through systems people actually use rather than through headline-grabbing announcements. The Southern Relief Road — a 3.5 km, three-phase, £148 million scheme — is a public attempt to ease congestion, make the town centre safer and more accessible, cut noise and open space for growth, with a town-centre masterplan iterating through community engagement rather than as a single finished design. Learning continues through Grantham's long civic memory, from The King's School traced back to 1329 to Grantham College's part-time, full-time, online and free adult courses that fit study around work and family. Ideas in Grantham only matter when they move through everyday routines.
By TEDx Grantham Team

Digital inclusion and adult tech learning in Grantham
Digital inclusion in South Kesteven is broader than broadband coverage: the Lincolnshire Health and Care Digital Inclusion Strategy 2025-28 frames access, devices, skills and confidence alongside the choice of face-to-face routes for people who cannot or do not want to use digital services. Daily tasks — shopping, banking, GP bookings, council forms — now depend on online access, so exclusion narrows independence in a district split between Grantham, smaller towns and rural villages. Adult digital learning is available locally through Grantham College's Institute of Technology, which runs IT, digital and engineering courses with flexible part-time, full-time, short-course and online formats, while keeping in-person service options remains a practical safeguard rather than a nostalgic extra.
By TEDx Grantham Team
