Manchester Evening News

Council goes to town with refurb of listed landmark

£270,000 SPEND TO PREVENT FURTHER DETERIORAT­ION

- By CHARLOTTE GREEN Local Democracy Service

COUNCIL bosses are to spend £270,000 repairing the grade twolisted town hall which is in danger of getting seriously dilapidate­d if it is allowed to deteriorat­e further.

Tameside council’s executive cabinet signed off the funding, which comes from a pot of £10m previously agreed to renovate the landmark on Market Square in Ashton-under-Lyne.

The town hall, which opened in 1840, has been closed, along with the Museum of the Manchester Regiment, since 2015.

Bosses planned to reopen it as part of phase three of the Vision Tameside project, but the collapse of constructi­on firm Carillion has delayed works.

Much of the ‘significan­t damage’ occurred when the physical link between the town hall and the Tameside Administra­tive Centre was disconnect­ed in order to demolish the centre and clear the site. Emergency repair works costing £120,000 are now to be carried out to the building parapet and roof by February.

Cabinet member for finance, Coun Oliver Ryan, said: “We are going to do some repairs on the building to allow it to be looked at for future uses and return it to the grandeur that it should be in as a testament to the people of Ashton and Tameside.

“The condition of the town hall has caused concern so we’re funding this significan­t work to safeguard the future of the building. Once the building is secured, a survey will be carried out to establish what’s needed to restore Ashton town hall to its former glory and when fully renovated the building will become more marketable for use, breathing life back into this important civic structure.”

A drone survey has highlighte­d the need for emergency repairs to the roof in order to stop water leaking into the building.

Chiefs are also spending £50,000 on a survey which will assess the costs of undertakin­g an ‘envelope’ repair scheme on the entire town hall, as part of two-stage redevelopm­ent programme. “The condition of Ashton town hall continues to give cause for concern and if significan­t work is not undertaken to the ‘envelope’ in the short term then this significan­t heritage asset may be put at risk, and the cost of work required to restore and redevelop the building is likely to increase significan­tly,” officers stated in a report to cabinet.

The works could take place from April.

Coun Oliver Ryan

 ??  ?? Ashton town hall is getting a makeover
Ashton town hall is getting a makeover

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