Friday 7 February 2014

Restoration work begins with careful deconstruction....


Work  on the   £1 million Heritage Lottery Fund  restoration project to save from collapse the Victorian Conservatory at Scampston has  begunWilliam Birch & Sons Ltd  have started work with the  careful deconstruction of the conservatory and bothies. Key parts of the structure are being labelled and then photographed in the joiners yard before the restoration and rebuilding work begins.
 
Pictured left to right:  Lee Scaife, Contracts Manager at William Birch & Sons Ltd,
Sir Charles Legard Director of Scampston Conservatory Preservation Company and Jack Klinck, Architectural Assistant at Caroe Architecture L
td. 
Protective hoarding installed in the walled garden.





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    Fiona Spiers, Head of the Heritage Lottery Fund in Yorkshire and the Humber said:
“The Heritage Lottery Fund is delighted to have been able to enable the Scampston Conservatory Preservation Company Ltd to renovate the Victorian Conservatory and bring it back into use.  The Conservatory will be a base for educational and heritage activities, so encouraging more people to learn about the relationship between the house and those who looked after the garden, and other aspects of horticultural heritage and skills.”


Caroline Legard, Project Leader for Scampston Conservatory Preservation Company  (SCPo) added: “We have been anxious about the stability of this building for several years and it is only with the very generous help of the Heritage Lottery Fund and other grant giving bodies that we shall be able to set up this Centre;  Our vision is not only to restore this wonderful building, but to enable a wide range of people of all ages to become involved not just with gardening, but with the wider estate at Scampston”.




Conservatory deconstruction in progress
Deconstruction in progress

Sections carefully  removed
Gardener's Bothies to be converted to the Heritage and Learning Centre
Conservatory doors
Conservatory window sections


Base of central lantern ready for transport to the joiners yard













































Meanwhile volunteers from The Croft, Camp Hill Village Trust (CVT) have been working on deconstructing and rebuilding the minibeast hotel in the Scampston grounds. This is part of the new Scampston Explorers' trail, being developed as part of the wider heritage interpretation and education work.




Minibeast hotel
The Croft (CVT) working on the minibeast hotel
Minibeast hotel restoration

Old aviary - clearing the vista line

Vista line cleared by The Croft, Camp Hill Village Trust



















Great Bustards at Scampston

WH St Quintin kept a collection of rare  birds at the Scampston Aviaries, they included snowy owls from Norway and secretary birds from the Transvaal. He also had one Tui from New Zealand. The centre of the collection was great bustards from Spain, which he successfully bred. This bird, ironically, had been hunted to extinction in the East Riding only a few decades before. William Herbert St Quintin died in 1933 when the St Quintin name itself became extinct.

Our heritage volunteers continue the painstaking research work, focusing on materials stored in the north library of Scampston Hall, all valuable material for the first exhibitions in the conservatory bothies when work is completed in August / September.


Heritage Volunteers - North Library
Volunteer Meeting  in Scampston Hall