Loughborough Bellfoundry restoration out to tender

Contractors have been invited to tender for the refurbishment of Britain’s last remaining bellfoundry.

Loughborough Bellfoundry has secured funding for £5m works to protect the Grade II listed buildings and museum.

It is the last bell foundry – known as John Taylor’s Bellfoundry – in the country since the closure of the Whitechapel in London in 2017.

More than 25,000 bells, which can be heard in more than 100 countries, have been cast there since the present bellfoundry was built in 1859, from London’s St Paul’s Cathedral to Washington National Cathedral in the US capital, and from the National Carillon in Canberra, Australia to Cape Town City Hall in South Africa.

In 2016, the Loughborough Bellfoundry Trust was set up to begin the project of restoring the bellfoundry’s buildings, redeveloping the site’s museum and protecting the bellfoundry and the ancient craft of bell making.

Plans for the restoration of the Victorian site have been drawn up by a team lead by Caroe Architecture and the Loughborough Bellfoundry Trust is now inviting tenders from main contractors to deliver the project.

Works are expected to begin later this year and complete towards the end of 2023.

Main contractors are invited to submit their proposals by the deadline of 16th May 2022.

Chrissie Van Mierlo, museum director at the Loughborough Bellfoundry Trust, said: “We are incredibly pleased and excited to have issued our invitation to tender on this project. The works are going to preserve and protect these historic and important buildings for years to come and provide a wonderful place for people to visit and learn about the highly specialised craftsmanship that the process of bellfounding entails.

“Our vision is for Loughborough Bellfoundry to become the global centre for the art of bell making and learning. We have been very fortunate to have benefitted from funding over the years to address the most urgent repair and conservation works required, and we’re thrilled to be in a position to enter the next stage of this project to secure the legacy of the Bellfoundry’s bells for future generations.”

Click here to sign up to receive our new South West business news...
Close