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 Appeared in The Independent.
They are crumbling monuments to a bygone age. And they are being given a
chance to be saved from ruin by that most modern invention - a Big
Brother-style television show.
In a project with English Heritage, the BBC is to run 10 one-hour
programmes dedicated to old buildings, in which viewers will be asked to
vote for the one that most deserves to be saved. Each will be championed
by a celebrity, and the winning structure will benefit from the proceeds
of the 30p telephone calls.
Restoration has been devised by the BBC in association with Endemol,
producers of the Channel 4 shows Big Brother and Great Estates. The
programmes on BBC2 and BBC4, starting on 8 August, will be supported by
radio discussionsand online voting. The buildings range from the humblest
of Scottish crofts to grand castles, and include unusual structures such
as a wooden sanatorium and the world's oldest Methodist chapel.
The corporation hopes to repeat the success of its Great Britons series
combining history and celebrity, which was won by Sir Winston Churchill.
The 30 listed buildings will be championed by, among others, the BBC
stalwarts Kate Adie, Kirsty Wark and Martin Bell. The former Conservative
minister Michael Portillo will speak on behalf of a linoleum factory in
Kirkcaldy, Scotland; the actor Richard E Grant hopes to save a Manchester
swimming baths; and the television personality Ulrika Jonsson will lend
her support to a coffin factory in Birmingham. Griff Rhys Jones will be
the narrator.
Tributes will be paid to the buildings by people who remember them before
they fell from grace, including an octogenarian former swimming champion
and a retired performer who longs to sing again in a Glasgow music hall.
The buildings were identified by English Heritage and its sister
organisations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Each was selected
on the basis of dire need and that it could not be rescued by existing
grants alone.
The producers of the series said they hoped the winner of the competition
would not be the most expensive restoration project. Funds raised from the
phone-in and donations would then benefit other buildings further down the
list.
The BBC fund will trigger grant aid from the lottery and national heritage
bodies. Simon Thurley, chief executive of English Heritage, said the
series would help fill an estimated shortfall of £400m on the cost of
repairing listed buildings. He said: "The cream of the nation's
architectural inheritance is being squandered through neglect and lack of
awareness. We welcome the BBC's commitment to raising the profile of these
important historic buildings."
Yesterday English Heritage published its Buildings at Risk Register. It
points the finger at local authorities which are responsible for one in
five of the endangered buildings. Another 98 historic buildings were added
to the endangered list of 1,500 in the past year.
Jane Root, the BBC2 controller, said: "On average every day in the UK one
historic building or monument is lost or destroyed. Yet we know there is a
real appetite for Britain's heritage - on a typical weekend more people
visit historic buildings and monuments than go to football matches."
Prized buildings in need of repair
Kinloch Castle, Rhum: Built between 1897 and 1901 by George Bullough, it
hosted summer parties for 13 years. It has the last surviving example of
an orchestrion, a sound system. Backed by Arabella Weir.
Harperly PoW Camp, Co Durham: Built 1943 to house low-risk prisoners. It
is the first Second World War camp to gain ancient monument status. The
buildings are mostly prefabs. Backed byMichael Wood.
Wilton's Music Hall, east London: Built in 1853, then rebuilt in 1858. It
belongs to the first generation of giant pub halls that began to appear in
London in the 1850s, thriving until 1870. Backed by Rory Bremner.
Crescent Arts Centre, Belfast: Built 1873. A ladies' collegiate school
founded by Margaret Byers, pioneer of women's education in Ireland. Half
of the building is deemed unsafe.

19 July, 2003.
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