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Recipients of £50m Heritage Horizon Awards announced

Melanie May | 16 July 2021 | News

sunset in the Scottish Cairngorms
Cairngorms

The National Lottery Heritage Fund has announced the recipients of its Heritage Horizon Awards, with over £50million of funding awarded to five projects across the UK.

The National Lottery Heritage Fund launched the Heritage Horizon Awards in 2019, to support ‘innovative projects that will revolutionise UK heritage’.

The five recipients are:

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Cairngorms 2030: people and nature thriving together – £12,486,100

Set within the UK’s largest National Park, this project will involve over 45 partners, ranging from the NHS to Highland and deer management groups. They will work together to tackle the climate emergency and nature crisis.

Cairngorms 2030 will preserve the landscape and its rare wildlife by expanding woodland, developing nature-friendly farming and using sustainable transport.

More people will be able to access the area – for example through the creation of a nature-based dementia centre. Communities will be able to take part in plant-growing programmes and, it is hoped, be empowered to shape a greener future.

Peatland Progress: A New Vision for the Fens – £8,186,200

Run by The Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire, this project will tackle climate change and biodiversity loss by bringing together the north and south ‘halves’ of the Great Fen.

Sustainable wet farming will protect peat soils, preventing soil erosion by locking in carbon. This innovative approach will help improve water quality and support local wildlife.

Peatland Progress will provide new jobs and training, and it aims to inspire young people to join in the environmental action they see on their doorstep.

Plymouth Sound National Marine Park – £9,582,100

The UK’s first National Marine Park will be set in a unique environment where the largest naval base in Europe, fishing boats, historic shipwrecks and fragile sea grass beds co-exist.

The project will revolutionise the way Plymouth interacts with its heritage, promoting a more harmonious relationship with the ocean and creating hundreds of jobs.

It will restore and repurpose two listed buildings and double the size of sea grass beds, contributing to a target of net zero carbon by 2030.

It will have five gateway sites, including a welcome centre and wellbeing hub and a range of programmes to help people get on, in and under the water.

Great Yarmouth Winter Gardens: Reimagining the People’s Palace – £9,977,100

The country’s only surviving seaside cast iron and glass winter gardens will be restored to its former glory as a People’s Palace on Great Yarmouth’s seafront. The year-round attraction will have gardens and seated areas, and offer relaxation, education and entertainment.

The winter gardens will be carbon neutral, and partnerships with catering and events companies will provide a sustainable income.

International Slavery Museum: Igniting Ideas and Action – £9,930,000

The International Slavery Museum in Liverpool will be transformed from a collection of galleries into a prominent museum, with its move into the historic Dr Martin Luther King Jr building at the centre of the regeneration of the docklands.

The museum will work with the local community and those most affected by the legacies of slavery in Liverpool, across the UK, and internationally, telling the challenging stories of enslavement, and celebrating black achievement.

Ros Kerslake, Chief Executive of The National Lottery Heritage Fund, said:

“We were focused on supporting heritage throughout the emergency in 2020, so I am pleased we can now announce awards which back big ideas and unlock possibilities.

 

“The pandemic has shown us all clearly what matters to us, particularly in relation to nature and climate change. This is a huge priority for us as an organisation, and three of these projects will be transformational for the green environment.

 

“All five share qualities of huge ambition, significant collaboration and the prospect of life-changing benefits for people and places. This is an exciting day for the UK’s heritage.”

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