Mauchline set for multi-million pound facelift
Mauchline’s most precious historic buildings are set for a dramatic transformation thanks to over £1.8m of grant funding from Historic Environment Scotland and East Ayrshire Council.
The town is the latest in the area to benefit from Conservation Area Regeneration Scheme (CARS) cash after East Ayrshire’s regeneration team, supported by the Mauchline CARS Steering Group, were successful with their bid for this year’s round of funding aimed at conserving and regenerating Scotland’s ancient and historic town centre properties.
The CARS project will run for five years from May this year, with an expected completion date of the end of March 2024. It aims to promote economic activity within the Mauchline Conservation Area by providing significant funding for repair and restoration of key buildings; small grants for building repairs; shopfront improvements and replacement of upvc windows and gutters with traditional materials; training and educational and community based projects including artworks and a possible archaeological dig.
With owners of eligible buildings able to apply for grants towards the cost of repairs, the community based projects will be supported by Mauchline Community Action Group who have established a Mauchline CARS Steering Group to promote regeneration within the town. With approximately 20 members, the group will meet monthly and liaise with members of East Ayrshire Council’s Planning and Economic Development Team, including a specially appointed Mauchline CARS Officer and a Modern Apprentice who will work solely on the project for its duration.
East Ayrshire Council’s regeneration team has a strong track record with CARS projects, having successfully won bids for funding for the regeneration of town centres in Kilmarnock, Cumnock and Galston in recent years. In every case, it has been bringing older buildings back into productive use, and helping building owners carry out vital long lasting, sympathetic but otherwise uneconomic repairs, boosting the local economy.
Councillor Jim Roberts, Cabinet Member for Economy and Infrastructure said: “What many people don’t realise is that regeneration is about more than bricks and mortar – it’s all about people and opportunity too. With the projects we’ve already completed in other towns in East Ayrshire we’ve seen huge and far reaching benefits to the community, business and the local economy.
“We’re blessed in East Ayrshire to have so many fine and historically important buildings, but naturally, as they age, they require upgrading and replacement of worn out features. To do these repairs effectively requires highly skilled tradesmen and the use of expensive traditional materials, and this often puts such work beyond the means of the owner and the eventual worth of the finished building. Owners struggle to find the money and wherewithal to do these repairs and sadly much of our precious built heritage slips into disrepair.
“By supplying grant assistance and ensuring the use of appropriate methods and materials, we can bring buildings up to date, giving them a new life and freeing the owners from the headache of constant running repairs and deterioration.
“At the same time we provide work and training for local skilled craftsmen, many of whom have now taken on apprentices with our help, so they can pass these vital skills on to the next generation. The funding also allows us to provide educational resources to local schools, teaching young people about their local heritage and encouraging them to consider how they can best preserve their future environment.
“And in Mauchline in particular, we’ll have a strong emphasis on maximising links with Burns, since he spent arguably the most productive years of his life here. We’ll have an artist in residence helping the community create lasting artworks and build a narrative to help promote the town to tourists. We also have the Holy Fair in May which will bring thousands of visitors to Mauchline.
“It’s all about securing the future of our heritage, making life a little easier for building owners, maximising the use of the buildings themselves and improving the appeal of the town to benefit locals and visitors alike.”
ends
Notes to editors
Editor’s notes:
The Mauchline CARS as submitted and approved by HES will be achieved by a combination of the following:
Priority building repair projects that will provide grant assistance for the re-use of redundant buildings and the intensification of underused buildings resulting in a viable end use. The proposed priority buildings are:
- Abbot Hunter’s Tower (Mauchline Castle) – A listed
- 8 Loudoun Street (Gavin Hamilton’s House) – A listed
- 8 Loudoun Street (Old Bakery), (red sandstone building)
- 21 Loudoun Street (Poosie Nansie’s)
- 3 High Street (Home of John Richmond)
- 8-12 Earl Grey Street (Mauchline & District Kilmarnock FC Supporters Club)
Grant assistance for the 2 ‘A’ listed buildings will be up to 90% of eligible costs with grant assistance for the remaining Priority Buildings up to 80% of eligible costs.
Small Grant Scheme providing funding for building repairs to properties identified as Medium/High priority by the Conservation Accredited Architects. Grant assistance of up to 75% of grant eligible costs up to a maximum grant of £25,000.
Small Grant Scheme providing funding for shopfront improvements. Grant assistance of up to 75% of grant eligible costs up to a maximum grant of £25,000. Eligible works can range from renewing shopfronts, replacing fascias, renewing/refurbishing doors, removing external roller shutters and replacing them with internal grills, and renewing/refurbishing hanging signs.
Small Grant Scheme providing funding for the replacement of UPVC windows and rain water goods with wooden sash & case windows,and cast iron rainwater goods in line with guidance on energy efficiency and climate change adaptation for traditional buildings. Grant assistance of up to 75% of grant eligible costs with a maximum grant of up to £15,000.
Public Realm Improvements to repair and upgrade a pedestrian thoroughfare and provide a vantage point for interpretation and accessing the ‘A’ listed Abbot Hunter’s Tower immediately to the north of Abbot Hunter's Tower.
Community Engagement and Education. Activities which promote community engagement and education related to the local heritage of the area, including:
- appointment of an ‘Artist in Residence’ to assist with community engagement through various artistic media
- creation of a community mural working with a small group of local people to represent the wide variety of Mauchline’s heritage.
- development of a series of educational activities that could still be used after the conclusion of CARS
- a design a traditional shop sign competition for schools (similar to the successful scheme in Galston)
or
- development of a Mauchline heritage game to be used by all age groups.
Other potential Community Engagement activities include:
(i) A Schools Heritage Awareness Course for Primary 7 & Secondary School
Pupils
(ii) An archaeological dig; potential sites include the bleaching green adjacent to
Castle Street where Robert Burns and Jean Armour first met.
(iii) Development of Interactive Town Trails
(iv) Re-issue of the 1986 local historical review "Mauchline in times past" originally
compiled and narrated by the Mauchline Burns Club
(v) Development of a 3D Digitised Model of Abbots Hunter Tower
(vi) Storytelling & poetry Mauchline Burns Club
(vii) Development of a curling stone factory visitor experience for Andrew Kay & Co Ltd factory
Training Plan - a programme of training courses for professional craftspeople and
construction workers in traditional building skills including:
- Schools heritage skills awareness course - Dumfries House Trust
- Get into Sustainable Building Course - Dumfries House Trust
- Masonry Repair and Pointing – Ayrshire College
- Climate Change & Energy Efficiency in Traditional Buildings for Development
Professionals & Contractors and Sub Contractors.
- Training of Volunteers/Tourist Guides
- Prince’s Trust Proposals
Read the Council’s full report