Yorkshire Post

£1m grant given to help restore historic city mill

Funding will aid British Library plan

- GRACE NEWTON NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE GOVERNMENT has given the owners of one of Leeds’ most historical­ly significan­t mills £1m towards restoratio­n costs.

Temple Works in Holbeck dates back to 1840 and is Grade I-listed, yet has been empty for years amid uncertaint­y about the former flax spinning mill’s future.

The new Culture Recovery Fund grants will enable developers to push ahead with plans to convert the Egyptian-inspired building into the home of the British Library in the north.

The mill’s fate was up in the air after fashion house Burberry pulled out of a highly-anticipate­d deal to move manufactur­ing to Temple Works in 2018. The brand later sold 10 acres of land it owned, bringing an end to plans for a weaving facility where their iconic trench coats would be produced.

Temple Works was purchased in 2017 by property company CEG, who have committed to restoring it – and it was then earmarked as a suitable northern outpost for the British Library. CEG bought the site for just £1 at auction.

The new investment will help fund urgent repairs, as the mill

has been derelict since it was last used as an arts centre in 2009.

£636,000 from the Heritage Stimulus Fund will go towards work to make the roof safe, and £400,000 from Historic England’s Yorkshire regional pot will subsidise restoratio­n of the Counting House, with its iconic Egyptian facade, in order for it to become a showcase room for the British Library plans. Temple Works was once one of the world’s largest mills, and its first owners, the Marshalls, hoisted sheep on to the roof to graze on grass grown to maintain humidity in the building – reportedly to stop the flax from breaking – creating a spectacle that drew visitors from far and wide.

The Counting House was the office used by the managers, board members and clerks.

It has been on the Heritage At Risk register since 2000.

Historic England chief executive Duncan Wilson said: “We are thrilled to provide funding from the Culture Recovery Fund and Historic England towards the repair of Temple Works, an instantly recognisab­le building which was an important part of Leeds’s industrial past and is set to play a key role in its future. It’s exciting to see the possibilit­ies for Temple Works taking shape, highlighti­ng the amazing potential of historic mills in Yorkshire to drive economic and social benefits for the region.”

It last had a permanent occupant 20 years ago, when mail order catalogue business Kay & Co operated from the site. Developers CEG intend to make Temple Works a focal point for the wider revival of the South Bank area.

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