Gosport Heritage Fund
WELCOME PAGE
Introduction
The Council is keen to support local heritage projects within the Borough, either built heritage or cultural heritage projects, through grants of up to £50,000.
The Council receives more grant requests than it can fund and uses the information provided to assess each application so please fully answer questions on the application form, including supporting documents as requested and ensure plans and costs are realistic.
What are we looking for?
The Heritage Fund has five funding priorities, and you will need to address at least one of these:
- Removing property from the 'Heritage at Risk' register
- Enhancing the townscape or setting of a heritage asset
- Improving sustainability and tackling climate change
- Creating employment or a sustainable future use
- Enhancing public access or interpretation
Funding awards will be looked on more favourably where applications can demonstrate:
- A strong evidence of need.
- Evidence that the proposed approach is likely to achieve the desired outcomes.
- The application does not contain high revenue costs that cannot be sustained long term.
- That a lasting benefit can be achieved.
- It meets more than one of the five funding priorities referenced above.
- Match funding is evidenced and 100% of costs are not being requested.
- Public benefit outweighs any private gain.
This list is not exhaustive, but provides general guidance on expenses that are eligible for grant funding:
Cultural Heritage Projects
Political or religious activities will not be funded, nor will food and drink, alcohol or banned substances. Volunteer and staff costs directly associated with a project may be considered for a period of up to one year, but should not be the main spend of the grant funding amount requested.
Built Heritage projects
The tables below which show eligible and ineligible works:
Eligible works | Explanation |
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Temporary building works | If there is an unavoidable delay before full repairs are carried out, temporary measures to protect the building can be funded. These include work to protect a structure from collapse, damage or deterioration such as propping and shoring, temporary weather proofing, or putting up protective structures to secure the building while its structure is being surveyed or repairs being drawn up. |
Roofs | Repairing roof structures, together with renewing or substantially repairing roof coverings; repairing roof features such as parapet and valley gutters, dormer windows and skylights, chimney-stacks and pots, cupolas and balustrading. |
Leadwork | Renewing roof leadwork, if it is no longer serviceable, or using lead welding in order to extend the life of lead that is of historic interest. It may be necessary to redesign the substrate to keep to current good practice. The visual and physical implications of this need to be considered carefully, however, before any changes are made. To avoid the risk of underside lead corrosion, lead roofing should be carried out between April and September and under a temporary roof. |
Rainwater disposal | The repair or replacement of rainwater disposal systems, both above and below ground can be funded. Lead and cast iron should be replaced on a like-for-like basis, although in certain cases where theft, vandalism or maintenance access is exceptionally problematic, there may be a case for using appropriate substitute materials. Digging trenches for drains and soakaways in demonstrably archaeologically sensitive areas will often require supervision by suitably qualified archaeologists, and a grant can be offered towards these costs. Installing proprietary electric heating tapes in gutters and rainwater heads where access is difficult and weather conditions are particularly severe, or where especially valuable building fabric or contents may be at risk from the guttering and rainwater disposal systems failing. Providing overflows and weirs to rainwater disposal systems so that, in case of blockage, water is shed away from the building. |
Walls | Necessary repairs to external walls, including work to their structure, surfaces, and decorative elements on the wall surface, and wall-coverings or claddings are fundable. |
Permanent access to carry out maintenance | If difficult access has prevented proper maintenance in the past, installing hatches, handrails or cables, fixed ladders or crawl-boards to improve access for maintenance and inspection can be funded as part of a wider project. |
Windows and Doors | Repairing or replacing elements set in walls, such as panels, windows and doors, including their frames, glazing, ironmongery and other fittings. |
External features | Repairing or replacing, where necessary, existing external features, such as balconies, canopies, bargeboards and shutters, where these contribute to the special architectural or historic interest of the building. |
Damp | Measures to manage rising or penetrating damp, if this is directly damaging the fabric or contents of a historic building, including providing surface water drainage, lowering external ground levels (where this would not be archaeologically or structurally damaging), and improved ventilation, if this is essential. Old buildings need to breathe, and keeping vapour permeable traditional plaster is preferable to re-plastering in relatively impermeable cement-based plasters. Providing a damp-proof course simply because the existing structure was built without one does not qualify for a grant. Experience has shown that providing damp-proof courses and membranes in historic structures has often transferred damp problems to other areas of the building. |
Reinstating architectural features | The reinstatement of architectural details must be carried out only if the building is otherwise in good repair (or will be repaired as part of the wider project). The objective should be to reinstate (in whole or part) elements of the exterior fabric of buildings that are essential to their design and character and that contribute to the character of the building and the street, provided the reinstatement is to the original size, pattern, detail and material. This can include:
The reinstatement of shop fronts to the original design (based on evidence), or to a design that is appropriate to the period and location, can also be considered for a grant. |
Decoration | Decoration only qualifies for a grant where they are necessary to make good after disturbance as a result of grant eligible works. |
Professional fees | Where a grant is offered for a project costing £20,000 or more you must employ the services of a competent professional with relevant specialist conservation knowledge and experience. The service should include, where applicable:
When you appoint your surveyor or architect you should make sure they include all the requirements set out above. We consider the competitive tendering of professional fees to be best practice. The scale in RIBA's A Client's Guide to Engaging an Architect can be used as a guide to the maximum allowances for fees. |
Cleaning | Cleaning will only qualify for a grant where:
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Pigeon deterrents | Non-electric physical barriers to prevent a build-up of damaging pigeon droppings, where these can be provided in a visually acceptable way and without using chemicals. |
Value Added Tax (VAT) | Grants will only be paid towards the VAT which you are unable to recover. It is up to you to determine the VAT status of your project. We will seek the repayment of grant towards VAT costs which you are subsequently able to recover. |
Preliminary costs and insurance | We can grant fund preliminary costs, such as scaffolding, hoardings, contractors' facilities and access for vehicles. The works contract with your professional team will set out the responsibilities for insurance. If you need to take out insurance other than that which forms part of the contract cost you can include the cost of this in your application. |
Management costs | We can offer support towards professional consultancy services. We cannot contribute towards the cost of your existing staff or in-house legal costs. If you believe that you will need to employ consultancy services please speak to us to discuss the scope of the work and briefs for the employment of such consultants and a list of potential tenderers. |
The following types of works would be ineligible for grant funding:
Ineligible works | Explanation |
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Demolition | The removal of any part of the building does not normally qualify for a grant, though exceptionally a grant may be offered for:
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Building services | The free-standing renewal of building services, e.g. new heating systems or rewiring (unless integral to conservative repair or where failure to renew or replace building services systems puts the historic fabric at risk). |
Substitute materials | The use of substitute materials where the original is obtainable, except in situations where the original materials have failed and will continue to fail regularly if they are replaced like-for-like. In the case of lead and copper where there has been a history of theft or there is a high risk of theft we can assess substitute materials on a case-by-case basis. |
Conjectural reinstatement | There is a strong presumption against wholly speculative reconstruction or reinstatement of features that have totally disappeared leaving no archaeological traces, photographs or drawings. Exceptionally, cases may arise where the ground floor façade of a building has been totally lost and the present façade detracts from the street, in which case grant aid may be given towards a well-informed design that is in keeping with its context. |
Maintenance and minor repairs | This is work that we would expect to be carried out on a regular basis to prevent the building from deteriorating, such as the cleaning out of rainwater goods, checking of flashings and roof coverings for slipped slates or tiles, removal of plants, redecoration including cleaning of metalwork and regular repainting of joinery. |
Please note: if your project involves repairing/maintaining a building you will need to upload proof of ownership or a letter of consent from your landlord when you apply for the grant.
Please note: the Grant Sub Board cannot fund projects that have happened prior to the grant award.