The leaking roof at Plas Gunter Mansion has been putting the building at risk of deterioration beyond repair before we could even apply for the funding needed to restore it.
Fortunately, two key sources of funding have come to the rescue, allowing vital repair work to start on the leaking roof mid-February. Plas Gunter Mansion Trust has been awarded £34,600 from the Architectural Heritage Fund (AHF) which supports communities to save the historic buildings they love – and £30,000 from the Welsh Government’s Cultural Recovery Fund set up to help cultural sites and businesses that lost money due to the COVID pandemic. Abergavenny Town Council has also contributed £2,500 towards the repair of the roof. The repair work will make the building watertight and ensure that the fabric of the building, and especially the secret chapel discovered within it is safe.
The Grade II* listed 17th century building, bought for the community by the Welsh Georgian Trust (now Plas Gunter Mansion Trust) in 2017, is of historical importance because of the discovery of a secret chapel in the attic where Catholics worshipped during a period when it was illegal and dangerous to do so.
It is the only known recusant chapel that exists in Wales and one of the best surviving examples in the whole of Britain. One of the priests who led the secret services was denounced to Parliament by priest-hunter, John Arnold of Llanfihangel Court, near Abergavenny. Father – later Saint – David Lewis was arrested, hanged, drawn and quartered at Usk on 27 August, 1679. He was Wales’ last Catholic martyr.
Until last March, an exhibition on the ground floor of the mansion on Cross Street, run by volunteers three days a week, managed to bring in enough donations to make minor repairs, but we had to close this space when the country went into the first lockdown and as yet we have been unable to re-open.
Adam Hitchings, Development Manager for Wales at the AHF commented: “We’re delighted to award this grant to Plas Gunter Mansion Trust. This support has been made possible due to funding we receive from Cadw, the Welsh Government’s historic environment service. The grant will address urgent repairs to the roof and halt further deterioration while the Trust prepares applications for the larger project to restore Plas Gunter to its former glory.”
The Trust has commissioned historical buildings specialists, Taliesin Conservation, to carry out the major roof work which should take six to eight weeks to complete.
“What’s most important at the moment is that the building is watertight. Deterioration of the fabric of the building, especially the chapel, was a major concern given how long it’s likely to be before we can do the restoration proper”, says Andrew Beckett, Acting Chair of the Plas Gunter Mansion Trust. “And on top of our gratitude to all the bodies funding the roof repairs, I’d like to recognise the trustees for their hard work in putting together the funding applications”, he adds.
The Trust is currently sustained by the rent it receives from retail businesses on the ground floor and any damage to the fabric of the building due to water leaking through the roof might have resulted in the loss of this much needed income in the medium-term.
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