Chichester Observer

Massive boost for Selsey Pavilion restoratio­n dreams

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Seasonal cinema and occasional theatre have moved a massive step closer with a huge funding boost for plans to return Selsey Pavilion to the heart of the community.

Selsey Pavilion Trust’s efforts to buy and restore the Selsey Pavilion have been rewarded with the promise of a £300k grant from the government’s Community Ownership Fund. The money will go towards buying and restoring the Selsey Pavilion, bringing it back to life for the benefit of the Selsey community.

Chairman of the Selsey Pavilion Trust, Christian Skelton is delighted with the news, rich reward for huge hard work so far – and massive encouragem­ent to move forward with the project in the years to come. Announced as part of the Spring Budget, the Community Ownership Fund awarded £299,400 (£249,500 in capital funding and £49,900 in revenue funding) to the project after a competitiv­e bidding process last December. The capital funding amounts to 50 per cent of the building’s sale price, together with a contributi­on towards essential maintenanc­e and repairs. The revenue funding will cover all costs incurred during the purchase process, surveys and architectu­ral planning for later phases.

“The building has been valued at £400,000 and this funding will put up £200,000 plus another £50,000 for urgent repairs like the floors need levelling before all the sections of the community can come in, plus also fire safety works and so on. We have got a heads of terms agreement with the owner that we are going to buy it. I have just spoken to a solicitor who's saying that there's no legal binding contract that we will be able buy it but we

do have this agreement. We've got to raise effectivel­y £250,000 but we've already got £35,000 ring fenced by the town council. That means we need to find another £215,000.” It's a big sum: “But it has just got considerab­ly less daunting with this fantastic news that we have had. It is funding that gives us big opportunit­ies to go to other foundation­s to try and get the rest of the money. We've got the thumbs up from the government for this project, that it's good for the community and should happen – and that should in itself make the whole thing a lot easier.”

The idea, as part of the initial works, after buying the building, is to put in retractabl­e raked seating and theatre curtains “that would allow us, as soon as the floors are levelled and the fire and safety measuresha­vebeensort­ed,to be able to show seasonal cinema. We would be looking at spring and summer and a bit of autumn because we don't have heating at the moment. Sothatwoul­dbephaseon­e–to buy it and to open with occasional cinema and comedians and so on. Phase two would be fundraisin­g further down the line to turn it into somewhere that is heated and insulated and can open much more.”

It's a passion for Christian: “We moved to Selsey 11 years ago and the Pavilion was this now 110-year-old theatre and cinemaonth­ehighstree­tright in the middle of the town that most people just walked by anddidn'tevenglanc­eat.itjust captured my imaginatio­n. It was all shut up. This was even before the cafe was put in and I just used to walk past it and I fell in love with the building; I fell in love with the idea that it might one day open again. Across the country there are so many of these theatres that have been closed and then usually demolished and absolutely lost forever but this is a building that is still there and just carries such a lot of history. All sorts of people have performed there in the past especially in the 20s and 30s, and our vision is to get it back openagainf­orthewhole­ofthe community.”

A key part of the plan is to reduce road traffic – by offeringve­rygoodreas­onstostayi­n Selsey, Christian added.

 ?? ?? Selsey Pavilion
Selsey Pavilion

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