Research :: Strategy :: Operations

Planning Solutions

consulting@pslplan.co.uk

Planning Solutions Consulting
9 Leigh Road, Havant
Hampshire PO9 2ES
United Kingdom
Phone: 023 9248 1999
Fax: 023 9248 1888

Archive for the 'Heritage' Category

Hull’s History Centre

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Part of the funding for Hull’s new History Centre was from the Heritage Lottery Fund and was the largest grant ever given to the city, at £7.7m.  The centre will house documents such as the city’s 13th Century Royal Charter, information about Hull’s maritime history and prominent figures in literature and drama.

Refurbishing Historic School Buildings

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Refurbishing Historic School Buildings - an interesting publication from HELM.

New brewing museum for Burton

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Our sister company Planning Solutions Limited has got good coverage in Attractions Management with their plans to re-open the former Coors Visitor Centre as the National Brewery Centre.

Mary Rose project

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Demolition has begun on the Mary Rose Ship Hall in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, making way for the £35m development of a new museum dedicated to the warship. A boat-shaped museum building will be built over the dry dock containing the Mary Rose, due for completion in 2012.

Welsh heritage

Friday, November 13th, 2009

The Welsh Assembly Government has allocated £19m towards the development of heritage tourism in Wales.
It is largely funded by the government and a £8.5m grant from EU Convergence Funds and the project is intended to maximise the economic value of heritage by increasing the volume, length and value of visits to Wales.

Boost Scottish tourism

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Owners of castles and tower homes in Scotland have been encouraged to apply for refurbishment funding to help boost tourism. It is thought that by restoring Scotland’s historical houses tourism could be boosted in the economic downturn.

These building could be used as hotels, rented accommodation or some business capacity. Historic Scotland has begun an audit of possible sites.

It is hoped that the project will provide an online database of castles and tower houses which demonstrate the characteristics that would enable a successful scheme for restoration.

Mary Rose by HLF

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Work on a new £35m museum at the site of the Mary Rose warship is to begin this autumn after the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) approved funding for the scheme.  A £21m grant has been awarded to the Mary Rose Trust to help fund the construction of the permanent museum housing artefacts from the vessel. The new facility will house the Mary Rose within a structure resembling a black, wooden jewellery box.

Cutty Sark

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

The Cutty Sark, which was devastated by fire in May 2007, is set to open next summer.  The ship was undergoing a restoration project at the time of the fire, which has now added £10m to the project’s original cost of £25m.  The project will see the ship raised 3 meters above its current position and suspended so that visitors can walk underneath to see the ship’s hull.  There will also be a glass canopy meeting the ship at the waterline and covering the dry dosck with 1,000sq m space for events.

Heritage Open Days

Monday, July 13th, 2009

English Heritage has taken over one of the country’s largest voluntary cultural event, Heritage Open Days, which sees more than 3,500 historic properties open to the public for free during September.  Concerns were raised over the future of the event after the Civil Trust in England entered administration in April. Among the buildings expected to open as part of this years planned Heritage Open Days is the Churchill Archives Centre, in Cambridge.  This year’s Heritage Open Days will take place between 10th and 13th September.

National Trust for Scotland

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Five National Trust for Scotland properties are set to close to the public as part of cost-cutting measures. A further 6 loss-making visited properties will also be affected by the proposed changes in 2009-10, which could result in closure or partial closure unless alternative funding sources are secured.

The Hill of Taryit Mansion House, Leith Hall House, Arduaine Garden, Inveresk Garden and  Mountain Visitor Centre are all set to close.

Visitor Centre - Ebbw Vale

Monday, March 30th, 2009

There are new plans that have been revealed for a family history and genealogy visitor centre in Ebbw Vale, Wales. The new centre will cost £12m and will be housed in an extension of the Grade 2 listed General Offices building. It will house the archives of the Gwent Record Office, in a purpose built space. These archives date back to the 1300’s and cover more than 5km of shelve-space, they will be fully searchable by visitors to the centre. The centre will consist of interactive exhibits, 3D technology and a large 5D cinema.  The attraction will be funded jointly by grants from the Welsh Assembly’s Heads of Valleys programme and the European Union Regional Development Fund.

U-534

Monday, February 9th, 2009

The German U-Boat, U-534 has now opened as a visitor experience in Merseyside - click here to find out more.

Titanic Attraction Southampton

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Southampton City Council (SCC) has unveiled plans for a new attraction commemorating the story of the Titanic disaster, the first stage of a project to establish a heritage centre in the city. An application for funding, from the Heritage Lottery Fund, to contribute to the cost of the £15m Titanic Story scheme has been submitted. The heritage centre will be developed in two stages, stage one including exhibition spaces, learning spaces, catering, retail and reception facilities.
SCC are currently seeking businesses to help deliver the project.  It is expected that the first stage of the attraction will be completed by 2012, marking the centenary anniversary of the disaster.

Titanic Visitor Attraction

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

The construction on a new £97m visitor Titanic attraction in Belfast, is due to begin January 2009. The attraction is called ‘Titanic Quarter’ and has been backed by the Stormont Executive, which is investing £43m towards the cost of the development.  The attraction will have a permanent Titanic Memorial Museum about the history of the Atlantic liner and the city in which it was built.  It is expected to be completed by 2012 and it is hoped that the site will attract up to 400,000 visitors a year.

Roman Museum

Friday, January 16th, 2009

Plans for a new Roman museum which would reate 120 jobs in Cumbria have been announced. Hadrian’s Wall Heritage, who have brought the land, wish to build the new attraction on the site of a Roman fort at Camp Farm, Maryport, hoping to attract more than 50,000 visitors to the area a year. Archaeologists will excavate the site before the museum is built.

Bestwood Colliery

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Plans to convert the Victorian Bestwood Winding Engine House, in Bestwood Country Park, Nottingham, into a visitor attraction has been given the go ahead. The restoration of the Grade 2 listed building will preserve one of the few remaining twin-cylinder, vertical winding steam engines used for English coal mining. It is funded by a £1.1 million grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, £300,000 from the Greater Nottingham Partnership and additional funding from the county council. A nearby electrical sub-station, Dynamo House, will also be restored and the remaining structure will be extended and converted into a visitor centre, with historical exhibition on the Winding House. Construction will be begin in August 2008 and is expected to be completed by summer 2009.

National Trust for Scotland

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

The Scotsman newspaper has published an interesting article on the struggle which the National Trust for Scotland faces with an aging membership and increasing competition from other visitor attractions.

U534 U-Boat

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

The BBC reports that plans to house a World War Two U-Boat at the Woodside Ferry Terminal in Merseyside have been given the go ahead.  Plans also include providing a visitor exhibition centre at the site.

Historic parks

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

Five historic parks in England will undergo restoration because of a £14m grant from the lottery funded Parks for People programme. The funding has been distributed between Newcastle (£4.5m), West Bromwich (£4.4m), Plymouth (£3.3m), Worcester (£803,000) and Newark (£1.13m). The funding will help to preserve the green spaces and the environment for the future.

World of Beatrix Potter

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

The World of Beatrix Potter Attraction, in Cumbria, has reported a 38% increase in visitors since 2006. The boost in the number of visitors is linked to the continuing promotion of the film ‘Miss Potter’ and events to celebrate the 100 year anniversary of character Jemima Puddle-Duck.

By promoting the Lake District area through the films release, the attraction has said that group visits appear to be extending their normal period of stay from one to two days.


Website design by Brit-Net in Hampshire.
PSL Blog is proudly powered by WordPress