Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust celebrates Fitted Rigging House project

The Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust has celebrated the completion of its £8.2m Fitted Rigging House project, ensuring the financial sustainability for providing better facilities for visitors, volunteers and the Trust’s nationally significant collection.

The Fitted Rigging House was built between 1793 – 1805 and traditionally provided accommodation for dockyard riggers to make standing rigging for warships and acted as a storehouse for new equipment. In recent years, it became increasingly at risk and was the Dockyard’s last (and largest) underutilised building.

With support from the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), National Lottery Heritage Fund (NLHF), South East Local Enterprise Partnership (SELEP) and a range of other charitable Trusts and Foundations, The Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust embarked on a landmark restoration project to transform the building from a heritage liability into an asset that would unlock the financial sustainability of both the building itself and the wider Historic Dockyard site.

The Trust has created a whole range of facilities for public benefit to compliment the successful commercial tenancy spaces. The Fitted Rigging House Project has enhanced the visitor experience in the 19th and 20th-century galleries (Steam, Steel and Submarines), created a new Volunteer Centre to greatly improve the work and rest facilities for 300+ volunteers, and enabled the Dockyard’s library and archive to be rehoused in appropriate conditions, improving accessibility for researchers and visitors.

A new Volunteer Centre marks an important step forward in enhancing facilities for the Trust’s volunteer workforce, who undertake a wide range of activities including operating the historic railway, maintenance of the historic warships, archive research, visitor support and a whole host of other activities. This centre creates a space for social interaction as well as practical facilities such as computer facilities, changing rooms and conferencing and meeting spaces.

The Reading Room allows improved flexibility for documents and more sensitive material to be shown on a programmed basis, and the relocation of the Conservation Lab enables wider involvement in the practical sides of preventive conservation and collections management.

A Changing Places facility has been designed to support those with challenging physical needs, forming part of the Trust’s ongoing commitment improving physical access across a challenging site.

The completion of this project sees most of the Trust’s buildings in productive use, either as gallery spaces or to generate income from a range of diverse uses. It is the culmination of the Historic Dockyard’s 32-year journey to financial self-sustainability built on its strategy of ‘preservation through reuse’. The site has been transformed from a dilapidated post-industrial site into a thriving world-class heritage location where people live, work and visit. The Economic Impact Assessment of the Historic Dockyard site has now been estimated to be in the region of £30m per annum to the local economy.

Bill Ferris OBE, DL, Chief Executive of Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust said, “The completion of this project is a pivotal point in The Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust’s history. Not only has this project allowed us an exceptional opportunity to improve our visitor and volunteer facilities, enabling people to both engage with and benefit from the site’s heritage, it has allowed us to move into a position of financial sustainability on a revenue level. We are now able, for the first time, to make decisions that determine the optimum charitable return rather than simply meeting our core charitable commitments. As a charity, this gives us an exciting strategic opportunity to lay the ground for a sustainable future. All of this would not be possible without the significant contributions from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, DCMS and a wide range of Charitable Trusts and Foundations who have generously supported us.”

Stuart McLeod, Director of the National Lottery Heritage Fund for London and the South said, “Financial sustainability is one of the most important parts of investing in heritage, but it can be one of the most difficult things to achieve. The team at Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust have managed this and deserve a great deal of credit for having the vision and dedication needed to reach this impressive milestone.

“This is a good moment to reflect on the breadth of positive change that can be achieved through National Lottery investment. Tourism, jobs, volunteering opportunities, accessibility, learning about our history, contributing to the local economy and a sense of local pride – this can all be found at the Fitted Rigging House and the wider Chatham Historic Dockyard and I urge anyone who can visit to enjoy and learn from this amazing heritage success story.”

The completion of the Fitted Rigging House marks the completion of the Trust’s Corporate Plan 2016 – 2021. The Trust will use this opportunity to write a new corporate plan for 2020  – 2025, building on an ethos of ‘evolution not revolution’, planning ambitions for the next 5 years and how the Trust will best meet its charitable objectives for years to come.

For further information about The Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust, please visit the website.

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