Stockport Council awarded £1.6m for urgent roofing repairs to protect the Grade I listed manor house and its collections

Beautiful Bramall Hall and its historical treasures will be preserved for decades to come, thanks to today's funding announcement of £1.6m to restore its roof (Monday, March 25)

Stockport Council awarded £1.6m for urgent roofing repairs to protect the Grade I listed manor house and its collections

Beautiful Bramall Hall and its historical treasures will be preserved for decades to come, thanks to today's funding announcement of £1.6m to restore its roof (Monday, March 25).

The Grade I-listed Tudor manor house, with origins dating back to the Middle Ages, is dubbed 'one of the most beautiful treasures of England' and welcomes 36,000 visitors annually (2022-2023). However, without urgent repairs, the building and its collections are at risk from the elements, and climate change is making this an increasingly pressing concern.

The funding awarded to Stockport Council through Arts Council England’s Museum Estates and Development Fund (MEND) (see notes to editors) is intended for vital work beyond the scope of day-to-day maintenance budgets.

Additional funding from Stockport Council will now enable the most urgent work to get underway, which includes stripping the roofs to relay and replace worn-away grit stone tiles and all leadworks and gutters.

These vital building repairs will help preserve invaluable historic objects and architectural features, such as internationally significant Tudor wall paintings, a rare surviving example of an Elizabethan pendant plaster ceiling and the work of arts and crafts architect George Faulkner Armitage.

Work is due to start in winter and is expected to take up to two years to complete. The council intends to keep the Hall open throughout this time and actively engage visitors and the community in the renovation works.

Stockport Museums is developing a new programme to enable the community and visitors to see Bramall Hall through new eyes. It will explore heritage building methodology, offer behind-the-scenes tours and introduce bats and bees – some of the Hall's more unusual tenants – through special events and activities.

In the longer term, plans are in place to bring alive the stories and symbolism hidden within the Hall's Tudor paintings, redevelop the schools' learning programme, and improve digital access to the Hall and its collections.