24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

News

English Heritage And Heritage Lottery Fund Give £6.8m To Churches

By Dawn Marshallsay

04/07/2008

Image: Photo of the exterior of church from the side

St Mark's Church, Lakenham, exterior August 07. © Crown Copyright 2008

The Heritage Lottery Fund and English Heritage have announced £6.8m of repair grants for over 70 Grade II listed places of worship across the country.

The largest grant in England will be given to St Mark's Church, Lakenham in Norfolk, set to receive £251,000 to renew its leaking roof. Two other Norfolk churches, All Saints in Hainford and Holy Trinity in Hempton, will receive £90,000 and £47,000 respectively.

Since 2002 more than £133m in repair grants have been awarded to around 1,500 historic places of worship through the Heritage Lottery Fund and English Heritage joint 'Repair Grants for Places of Worship' scheme, which is the largest single funding source for work of this kind.

Image: Photo of the decorative carved wood interior of a church, looking towards the altar

St Mark's Church, Lakenham, interior east. © Crown Copyright 2008

“In addition to their religious significance and the character they add to towns and villages, churches are living buildings which often host a diverse range of activities, from martial arts classes to mother and toddler groups," said Robin Llewellyn, Head of the Heritage Lottery Fund for the East of England.

“The joint Heritage Lottery Fund and English Heritage scheme makes a significant difference to the long-term prospects of these crucial buildings."

The announcement of the latest round of grants was made at the Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic Church in Reading on July 4 2008. The church will receive a £74,000 grant.

Currently being used by the town’s Polish community, Sacred Heart will carry out structural repairs to its south west tower and spire, the nave’s west gable and the gutters.

Reverend Father Jerzy Januszkiewicz of Sacred Heart said: “I would like to express my sincere gratitude to English Heritage for giving us a grant for the renovation and repair of our church - which will save it from demolition.”

Image: Photo looking down at a church's pews from the gallery

St Mark's Church, Lakenham, interior west and gallery. © Crown Copyright 2008

Though the Church of England currently spends £120m a year on repairs, English Heritage research published as part of its Inspired! campaign (launched 2006) suggests that the backlog repair bill for all listed places of worship in England is an estimated £925m over the next five years, which equates to £185m a year.

English Heritage and the Heritage Lottery Fund, who have a particular interest in developing visitor audiences and engagement with sacred places in England, also support the Sacred Britain initiative and the Aspire project, which aim to promote access to places of worship.

A copy of the application pack for Repair Grants for Places of Worship in England 2008-2009 is available from the HLF website or from the English Heritage website. All grant enquiries should be directed to EH Regional Offices or EH Customer Services on 0870 333 1181.

For for more information about the Aspire Project see www.aspireproject.info.

Download the Sacred Britain Strategy in a pdf file

For more about English Heritage's Inspired Campaign see www.english-heritage.org.uk/inspired

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Mark Leckey Scoops £25,000 And The 2008 Turner Prize

Library Thief Update: Sentencing Adjourned Until January 16, 2009

Fund Aims To Realise Long Campaign For Cardiff Museum

Britglyph Art Campaign Uses Web To Make Mass Geoglyph

Inaugural Awards Ceremony Honours UK Arts Philanthropists

Rare Silver Cup Commemorating Coronation Of Charles II Is Saved For The Nation

London Fire Brigade Museum Escapes Closure - For Now

Another Busy Year For Archaeology On Orkney In 2008

Severndroog Castle To Be Restored Thanks To Lottery Grant

Campaign To Save Captain Scott's Hut Needs Another £65,000

Open Air Lab Project Launches At The Natural History Museum

Gravity Defying Vertical Racer Drives Kids Up the Wall At MOSI

DCMS And English Heritage List Seven London Bridges

Railway Museums Launch Joint WWII Railway Worker Project

Bowes Museum Famous Mechanical Swan Goes Back On Show In December

Free Admission To Historic Scotland Sites For St Andrew's Day

Fund Raising Scheme Is Backing Great North Museum: Hancock

Tyneside Gallery Plots New Display After Funding Victory

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top