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The Victorian Society
1 Priory Gardens
LONDON W4 1TT

T 020 8994 1019
E Email

Charity No. 1081435
Company No. 3940996
Registered in England. Office as above.


 

Nominate an endangered building now

We're now looking for this year's ten most endangered Victorian or Edwardian buildings in England and Wales and we need your help to find them.

Following the success of last year’s Top Ten Endangered Buildings list, which threw the spotlight on such threatened gems as Shadwell Park in Norfolk and the Frank James Hospital on the Isle of Wight, we're once again asking you to scour your local area and send in photographs and details of any good quality Victorian or Edwardian buildings at risk that they find. The ten best and most threatened buildings will be published in the November issue of The Victorian, the Victorian Society’s magazine, and used to inform the charity’s campaigns.

‘This is an opportunity for members of the public to let us know about threats to the buildings they value,’ said Dr Ian Dungavell, Director of the Victorian Society. ‘Judging by the number of nominations we received last year, it’s clear that heritage matters to very many people. The top ten list is a chance for campaigners to make their voices heard.’

Already things are looking up for several of the buildings featured on the Victorian Society’s Top Ten Endangered Buildings list for 2007. While emergency repairs are being carried out at Shadwell Park, grants have been awarded to the Lanfyllin Union Workhouse and St Walburge’s in Preston, and the long-neglected Easington Colliery School has at last been put up for sale.

‘Good buildings can become threatened for all sorts of reasons,’ continued Dr Dungavell. ‘Often the hardest to protect are those that are simply locked up and left to rot. As last year’s buildings show, campaigns like this really can make a difference, so if there is a building that you value which is derelict, dilapidated or facing an uncertain future, please let us know.’

For information about the Top Ten Endangered Buildings hunt or to nominate a building, please email community@victoriansociety.org.uk or write to The Victorian Society, 1 Priory Gardens, London, W4 1TT. The deadline for nominations is Monday 1 September 2008.

 

Users Comments

Re: Nominate an endangered building now
Posted By steve 1 October 11, 2008 04:08:05 PM

I nominate Revesby Abbey, out of Boston, Lincolnshire. I cannot believe the owner has been allowed to get away with such neglect. As an Australian, the main reason I moved to the Uk was for the appreciation and love for Victorian architecture. Now I am beginning to wonder why I moved here, as the government seems to do nothing, and does not understand just how badly neglected some of these important buildings are. In ten years time, the best examples of Victorian architecture will be found elsewhere (not in the Uk), if the government does not do something soon.

Re: Nominate an endangered building now
Posted By buttep01 1 October 25, 2008 06:16:57 PM

I think that Oldhams town hall should be certainly in the top ten, purely for its historical value. It was where Winston Churchill was first elected as an Mp and began his long road to eventually saving the country. It was last used in the 1970's as a courthouse then sealed up, recently the council went in for a photo op with the local paper to see the condition and to take photos. All of Oldham was shocked to see how the roof in the ballroom is ready to collapse. The 'Egyptian' room is also in a bad state and the building which should be of civic pride is a derelect shell. A disgrace in other words.
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