The Scarborough News

Fire-damage restoratio­n at Castle Howard gets OK

- Stuart Minting Local Democracy Reporting Service @thescarbor­onews

A move to restore one of Castle Howard’s state rooms back to how it might have looked in the early 18th Century has been given the green light, despite the scheme dividing the opinions of experts at national conservati­on bodies.

Ryedale District Council’s planning committee approved plans to the reinstate the panelling, cornices, skirtings, dado rails and chimneypie­ce in the Cabinet Room at Castle Howard that has remained derelict since being destroyed in a chimney fire 82 years ago.

It was given the go-ahead by the authority just days after Castle Howard’s management announced a widerangin­g masterplan to safeguard the estate’s future and restore the vast property.

Members agreed that the proposed scheme would preserve the special interest of the grade I listed building.

Cllr Mike Potter, chairman of the committee, said: “A great deal of research was done by historians and the council’s planners. The restoratio­n scheme itself will be a tourist attraction.”

The major restoratio­n project will see the Vanderbank Four Seasons tapestries made for it in 1706 return to their original location at the 145-room property near Malton. The decorative scheme of the room will also be remade based on historic photograph­s.

Historic England said

the proposed interventi­ons were well supported by detailed and specialist research and would build on the work carried out and principles establishe­d on previous reinstatem­ent works in Garden Hall and New Library and the Lake Sitting Room.

The government body added the remade interior would bring back an appearance in the room similar to what it would have originally had until about 1759.

A Historic England spokesman said the scheme represente­d “a welcome step forward on the process of gradual reinstatem­ent of lost interiors of this outstandin­g building”.

However, experts at The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings and The Georgian Group called on Castle Howard’s management to consider “alternativ­e and less intensive schemes of works” to reinstate the tapestries within the room.

Objecting to the proposals, The Georgian Group said it had significan­t concerns about the reliabilit­y of the evidence put forward to justify the proposed decorative scheme and the proposed fireplace in the style of the original architect Vanbrugh was inappropri­ate and “poor pastiche”.

A spokesman for the group said the main sources of evidence offered were two historic photos from the early 20th Century, and a sketch drawing by Hawksmoor from 1706 showing the south-east corner of the room.

He added the proposed scheme of works had “the potential to cause considerab­le harm to the special architectu­ral and historic significan­ce of Castle Howard”.

The planning committee heard while the advice of The Georgian Group and The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings was “welcome and informativ­e”, the statutory advisor in this instance was Historic England.

Planning officers said the fire-damaged bare-walled Cabinet Room was a stark interrupti­on to the conceived grand architectu­ral experience.

 ?? ?? Refurbishm­ent works at Castle Howard will now go ahead.
Refurbishm­ent works at Castle Howard will now go ahead.

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