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Work on new Staffordshire History Centre underway

Work to build a new £5.1m history centre for Staffordshire has started.

Over a thousand years of the county’s history will be brought to life in an exciting new heritage project for the county. The project has been made possible thanks to a grant of £4,858,699 from The National Lottery Heritage Fund.

The new centre will see an extension to the existing Staffordshire Record Office building on Eastgate Street in Stafford, incorporating the renovated and redisplayed William Salt Library building.  A modern glazed entrance will link both buildings, creating a bright exhibition space to showcase museum, archive, and William Salt library collections. Additional strong rooms will provide space for a further 55 years of collections.

Protective fencing has been put up on site, as workers from construction company Pave Aways Ltd start their preparatory works.  Over the next three months, its team will start the refurbishment of the William Salt Library and existing records office by stripping out the interiors, do the groundworks for the new strong room and begin the footings for the new link that will form the new entrance.

Mithra Tonking, chair of the William Salt Library Trust said:

“The William Salt Library Trustees are delighted that construction work is now under way. The Staffordshire History Centre project offers a new and exciting future for a much-loved listed building in the centre of Stafford, as well as greatly improved storage and management of the wide-ranging and unique William Salt Library collection of material, which covers every aspect of Staffordshire’s heritage”

The work on the History Centre gets underway only a short walk from where the renovation of the Market Square is taking place, which is the first phase of the major transformation of Stafford town centre.

The project has funding to deliver an ambitious four-year programme of activities enabling people to discover more about their family or local history through behind-the-scenes tours, history days, exhibitions, and family activities.  A new website will be developed, and key collections will be digitised to widen access.

A brand-new learning programme is being created for schools, families, and adult learners.  Four project staff have been recruited to develop and deliver the programme, supported by over 60 volunteers.

The William Salt Library collections have been moved from the building revealing hidden architectural features which will be restored. New interpretation will retell the story of the building, as well as William Salt and his collection.

The total cost of the project is £8,780,239 with a grant of £4,858,699 from The National Lottery Heritage Fund, made possible by money raised by National Lottery players.  Additional match funding of £3,921,540 was raised by the partnership, including Staffordshire County Council funding, grants, donations from local organisations and friends and in-kind contributions from volunteers.

People can keep up to date with the project at www.staffordshire.gov.uk/Heritage-and-archives/Staffordshire-History-Centre

 

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