Sunderland Echo

New-look Dun Cow unveiled

- Fiona Thompson fiona.thompson@jpimedia.co.uk @fionathomp­son__

It’s been hidden away behind scaffoldin­g for a year, but now Sunderland’s Dun Cow pub is there for all to admire once again.

The 1901 building, constructe­d in the same year as The Peacock and six years before the Empire Theatre, has undergone restoratio­n as part of a £2million Bishopwear­mouth Heritage Township scheme, which will see a number of listed buildings refurbishe­d and the new Town Park completed.

The completion of the works means the structure put up to help constructi­on workers as finally been taken down, revealing the detailed and repaired stonework, which includes a number of carved animals, while the building has been made watertight once again, after its roof was deemed to be in a “terrible state” by its owner

Pub Culture.

Its clock, which stopped 20 years ago, is also ticking again after it was given some TLC from experts.

Paul Callaghan is one of four founding members of Pub Culture, which also owns the Peacock, with the scaffoldin­g around that venue also taken down in recent weeks following its restoratio­n as part of the same scheme, which is being managed by Sunderland City Council.

He explained the Dun Cow was designed by architect Benjamin Ferdinand Simpson, whose other wellknown landmark building in the region is the Emmerson

Chambers in Blackett Street, Newcastle, now home to the city’s branch of Waterstone­s, which he developed as his own office.

It, along with the Peacock and Empire, are created in the Edwardian Gothic style, used as Sunderland’s great and good looked to create a grand and beautiful town to reflect its improving fortunes.

He added: “Both the Dun Cow and Peacock had been pretty neglected over the years and this has helped bring them back to their Edwardian glory and now these buildings are part of this regenerati­on of Sunderland.

"The coronaviru­s crisis has its challenges at the moment and we hope that is soon over, but what we are doing will help people continue to enjoy these buildings.

"We are creating this cultural quarter in the city for people so they can go and see a show, have some refreshmen­ts and feel safe, and I think it’s really going to transform the city.”

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 ??  ?? The Dun Cow scaffoldin­g has now been removed after a year of work to restore it was completed.
The Dun Cow scaffoldin­g has now been removed after a year of work to restore it was completed.
 ??  ?? Paul Callaghan, of Pub Culture, is delighted with the results.
Paul Callaghan, of Pub Culture, is delighted with the results.

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