Mindful Walking

Areas We Cover Across the West Midlands

Men’s Prosperity Club supports men across Birmingham, Stourbridge, the Black Country, and the wider West Midlands. Each area has its own history of work, resilience, industry, and community pride. Through our Walk & Talk sessions, Pickleball Socials and community activities, we create a safe third space where men can connect, talk openly, and feel supported.

Birmingham

Known as the City of a Thousand Trades, Birmingham has a strong history of industry, manufacturing, small workshops, and working-class pride. This makes it a powerful place to discuss modern men’s wellbeing, work pressure, and the need for a safe “third space” outside work and family.

Jewellery Quarter

The Jewellery Quarter has long been connected to jewellery making, medals, trophies, and family-run craft businesses. This is a good place to mention the Walk & Talk because it connects heritage, community and wellbeing.

The Black Country

Stourbridge sits within the wider Black Country identity, historically linked with coal, metalwork, glass, hard labour and industrial communities. This can connect to men’s mental health through themes of pressure, resilience, isolation and the need for supportive spaces.

Wolverhampton

Wolverhampton has a strong industrial past, including manufacturing, metalwork, engineering, and transport-related trades. This area can represent hard-working men, family responsibility, and the importance of community support.

Walsall

Walsall is historically known for leatherwork and saddlery. This can connect to skilled labour, craftsmanship and the pride many men take in work, while also showing why wellbeing should not be ignored.

Sandwell

Sandwell includes towns strongly connected to the Black Country’s industrial history. It can be framed around working-class strength, community identity and the importance of giving men safe spaces to talk.

Coventry

Coventry is known for manufacturing, engineering, transport, and its rebuilding after wartime destruction. This can connect to resilience, recovery and rebuilding mentally as well as physically.

Solihull

Solihull has a different identity, with a mix of suburban life, business, family communities and green spaces. This can show that men’s mental health support is not only needed in industrial areas, but across all communities.

Stourbridge

Use Stourbridge as the other main area, especially for the Pickleball Social. In the transcript, it is connected to The Black Country, with historical links to mining, hard labour, isolation, risk and men’s mental health.

Solihull Town Centre

A modern suburban centre known for family communities, business growth and balanced living environments.

West Bromich

An industrial town shaped by factories, manufacturing and working-class communities. A good example of why strong community spaces matter for mental health and social connection.

Smethwick

Historically connected to manufacturing and migration, helping shape Birmingham’s wider community culture and diversity.

Tipton

One of the historic centres of the Black Country, strongly associated with coal mining and heavy industry. You can connect this to themes of resilience, hardship and the need for supportive environments today.

Oldbury

Known for industrial manufacturing and traditional working communities. Represents the balance between work, family life and personal wellbeing.

Halesowen

A Black Country town with strong local identity and community culture, fitting for discussions around belonging and social connection.

Redditch

Historically famous for needle and fishing tackle manufacturing. Can be used to talk about changing industries and modern pressures on communities.

Wednesbury

Industrial heritage town known for ironworking and manufacturing, representing the traditional hard-working Midlands culture.

Darlaston

Historically built around mining and metal trades, connecting strongly with the transcript’s themes around labour and men’s wellbeing.