“I am not prepared as Mayor to stand by and see history in the form of buildings like these hit the skip.”
Owners of London’s 572 buildings and monuments on the English Heritage at Risk Register will be encouraged to bid for the money available to improve the condition and use of their properties. The residential properties on the list, which make up 50 per cent of those identified as at risk in the capital, will be prioritised in terms of gaining grants.
The London properties include a Victorian villa in Enfield and a Gothic country house in Ealing.
Properties which are not currently residential have been identified as potentially being turned into housing. These range from a 19th century sailmakers and chandlers in West India Dock Road and a former workshop and engineering works in Park Street, Southwark.
English Heritage’s Chief Executive, Simon Thurley, joined Boris Johnson at the announcement event and endorsed the strategy and asked other local authorities to follow suit: “I would urge every civic leader in the country to follow Mayor Johnson’s example and use our Heritage At Risk Register to prioritise their own funding.
“In doing so, they will be saving their communities’ history, rescuing its pride and identity and providing inspiring new spaces for local people to live and work in.”
Nationally, one in 12 heritage sites so far surveyed are considered to be at risk, as defined by the English Heritage survey. As well as buildings these include one in five scheduled monuments, one in five battlefields, one in five wreck sites, one in 14 registered parks, gardens and landscapes, one in 30 Grade 1 and 2* buildings.