Leicester Mercury

Funding boost opens way for

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TWO important examples of Leicester’s architectu­ral history have received a financial boost to support expert repair work.

Leicester has been awarded two grants totalling £27,500 from part of the Culture Recovery Fund called the Heritage Stimulus Fund, administer­ed by Historic England.

The city council successful­ly bid for £20,000 to help restore the grade II*-listed Quenby Hall Gates, pictured, which stand in the gardens of Newarke Houses Museum.

In addition, the Leicester Unitarians have been awarded £7,500 from the fund to support repairs to the boundary wall of the city’s historic Great Meeting House.

The highly decorative, wrought iron Quenby Hall Gates date back to the early 18th century and were originally located at Quenby Hall, near Cold Newton and Hungarton, in Leicesters­hire.

They were donated to Leicester Royal Infirmary in 1768, following a redesign of the hall’s gardens, and remained on the hospital grounds until the building of the Victoria Wing in 1901. They were relocated to New Walk Museum in 1902, before being moved to their current home in 1955.

The funding will pay for the complete restoratio­n and repainting of the historic gates, which will be carried out by expert contractor­s Calibre Conservati­on.

Repairs will also be carried out to the historic boundary wall to the Great Meeting House and Unitarian Chapel on Butt Close Lane.

The grade II-listed, 18th century red brick wall will be profession­ally surveyed, repaired, repointed and any missing brickwork replaced. This work will be part-funded by a grant from the city council’s Historic Buildings Grant scheme.

Both structures are in a poor condition and are included in the latest version of the Leicester Heritage at Risk Register. In the last four years, 25 properties have been removed from the local list due to efforts to repair, conserve and find new uses for them.

Deputy city mayor heritage champion Councillor Adam Clarke said: “We are delighted Leicester has received this support from the Culture Recovery Fund. It will make a real difference in our efforts to enhance and protect the city’s historic buildings and artefacts meaning that we can all benefit even more from the valuable

contributi­on they make to Leicester.”

Mike Drucquer, chairman at Leicester Unitarians, said: “We are delighted to receive these grants for the much-needed restoratio­n of the historic boundary wall.

“It has such an interestin­g history attached to it. The wall is a patchwork of different materials including stone from the old town walls and even the odd bit of Roman tile. It always makes a great starting point for historic tours.”

Work is due to begin on both sites by late spring.

Lifeline grants from the government’s £1.57 billion Culture Recovery Fund are designed to protect heritage sites and ensure jobs and access to culture and heritage in communitie­s are protected during the coronaviru­s.

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