Liverpool to pay homage to Hillsborough victims
The event in the city is being led by the Lord Mayor and the Sheriff of Nottingham and there will also be public silences in four different suburbs of the city; in Bulwell, Clifton, Hyson Green and Sherwood.
Football fans attending the events are asked to wear their team's colours, whichever club they support.
An inquiry into the disaster - presided over by Lord Justice Taylor - criticised senior police officers on duty at the match for a "failure of control" and recommended the introduction of all-seater stadia.
Families of the 96 remain determined to fight for further inquiries into the deaths.
They believe a Major Incident Plan was never initiated by South Yorkshire police and Liverpool fans were denied emergency medical attention.
A single inquest was held covering all the victims, recording a verdict of accidental death.
Anne Williams, who lost her son Kevin, 15, is preparing for a fourth legal bid to reopen his inquest.
Mrs Williams, 66, from Chester, disputes official records which state all the fans who lost their lives at Hillsborough were dead or brain dead by 3.15pm.
She said: "It is a big can of worms but it needs to be opened because the verdict of accidental death is wrong.
"Why has no individual or group been held to account for the worst disaster in British sporting history?"