AHF and HES: £2Mn partnership funding for the sustainable community re-use of Scotland’s historic buildings

image for illustration: Fiona Newton

The Architectural Heritage Fund (AHF) is delighted to announce the extension of its long-standing strategic partnership with Historic Environment Scotland (HES) as, thanks to the HES Partnership Fund, the AHF will continue and enhance delivery of core grants and project support in Scotland.

The AHF writes:

The AHF provides a unique mixture of advice, early-stage grants and social investment loans to help community-led organisations find sustainable new uses for the historic buildings that matter to them, benefitting local people and places. In Scotland, specifically, the AHF’s grants programmes – primarily funded by HES and the William Grant Foundation (WGF) – support around 50-60 projects every year, from the Western Isles to Fife and from the Shetland Isles to the Borders. A wide array of buildings, from medieval towers to 1960s churches – and everything in between – have been brought back into use or community control to provide a range of new services, including much-needed local affordable housing, community centres, pubs, workspaces, and childcare facilities, as well as arts and cultural spaces.

Since 2020, thanks to generous funding support from HES and WGF, the AHF has been able to award more than 260 grants in Scotland to over 200 organisations, with a value of £2.4 million, to support groups to undertake initial feasibility and project development work. These have directly levered in a total of almost £6 million in wider investment. Over half of all grants are to new organisations who have not previously taken on historic building projects, and more than two-thirds of grants were to projects based in or supporting areas of high deprivation or other equivalent assisted areas of need.

In Edinburgh, the AHF has supported Gracemount Mansion Development Trust’s (GMDT) project to secure ownership of Gracemount Mansion and re-open it to serve the local community once again. Originally a rectory, this Category B-listed building served as a much-loved youth and community centre from the 1960s until 2018. It is currently empty and on the Buildings at Risk Register, and is located in an area listed as in the top 20% deciles of deprivation according to Scottish Government SIMD data.

AHF awarded the GMDT two HES-supported development grants in 2023 and 2024 to help develop its plans and build a strong business case for acquiring  the building; this has led to the group successfully preparing to take on ownership this Spring. A further WGF-supported grant, awarded earlier this year, will help the Trust with emergency repairs to the roof, ensuring the building is wind and watertight while they continue to work on the longer term plans for its future.

With this new three-year agreement, which includes an increase in funding from HES, the AHF is now re-launching its core Scotland grants programme, offering larger amounts of financial support for groups looking to test potential project ideas, prove the viability of their plans, and then develop these to the point they are ready to apply to larger capital funders, such as HES, The National Lottery Heritage Fund, and Scottish and UK Government regeneration funds.

Audrey Carlin, Trustee of The Architectural Heritage Fund, said: ‘With our new grant programmes, we are particularly keen to support groups developing projects that serve areas of high multiple deprivation; involve a change of use or ownership of a historic building; and/or are looking to improve their energy efficiency/environmental sustainability.’

Matthew Mckeague, Chief Executive of The Architectural Heritage Fund, said: ‘We are immensely grateful to Historic Environment Scotland for this renewed and increased investment in our grants and support programme. It will extend our valued long-term strategic partnership, and will enable us to continue providing funding and guidance over the next three years. This will support communities across Scotland to take control of and adapt historic buildings for sustainable social and economic impact.’

Alison Turnbull, Director of External Relations and Partnerships at HES, said:  ‘We are proud to support community-led organisations across Scotland through our Partnership Fund award to the AHF. By enabling communities to play a leading role in their local heritage, their programmes help breathe new life into historic buildings. This increased investment reflects our commitment to ensuring that heritage is accessible to all and everyone can benefit from our historic environment. By helping organisations take the vital first steps towards the sustainable reuse of Scotland’s built heritage, we help safeguard it for future generations. We look forward to seeing these places and spaces at the heart of local communities revitalised, bringing them back into use and creating a more vibrant Scotland.’

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