£350k grant to transform a piece of history in High Wycombe High Street
A 14th century building in High Wycombe town centre is to be restored thanks to a £350,000 grant from the Architectural Heritage Fund.
The former Wheatsheaf Inn on the old London to Oxford road will be restored thanks to the grant made to the Buckinghamshire Historic Buildings Trust (BHBT) which will oversee renovation at the Grade II listed 2/3 High Street, currently in use as a shop.
A start on the restoration of the timber-framed building will be made in August 2020.
When finished the building will be designed to meet the need to improve the town centre’s night time offer to young commuters and students, as well as becoming a busy hub for community users during the day.
The project is an important part of the efforts of Buckinghamshire Council’s to draw more people to High Wycombe’s historic quarter by breathing new life into heritage buildings, and James said the Trust wanted it to play a part in encouraging people to cherish this undervalued part of the town.
The building is owned by Buckinghamshire Council and leased by BHBT. It is the earliest surviving building in High Wycombe apart from the parish church.
While it served the town as The Wheatsheaf Inn during the 17th century and a coffee house in the 18th, its position close to the church and market place suggests it may have originally been a guildhall, market house, or connected with the church.
In the early 20th century the shop became The Old Wheatsheaf Pharmacy and later served the historic High Street as a tobacconist and dry cleaner. Today just one half of the ground floor is occupied by Anabelle’s, a fashion jewellery shop.
The BHBT’s ‘Wheatsheaf Project’ restoration scheme, a nod to its former use, aims to renovate the building for mixed-use as a commercial bar on the ground floor with separately accessible venue and activity spaces on the first and second floors for hire by community groups.
Dr James Moir, Chairman of BHBT, said the plan was for a flexible adaptation of the upper floors, currently unoccupied, with a platform lift and accessible toilets, to create good scope to host meetings, events and classes.
James said: ‘This award is the culmination of three years hard graft to acquire this gem of a building, establish its significance and secure an anchor tenant sympathetic to our wider vision.
We’re excited to be creating a focal community space which will delight in using its heritage as a means of encouraging everyone to linger in and cherish the town’s undervalued historic quarter.‘
James paid tribute to support from Architectural Heritage Fund and ‘hand-holding’ by the Council through the long bidding process for the grant.
John Chilver, Buckinghamshire Council Cabinet Member for Property and Assets, said: ‘This is an important preservation milestone on the road to breathing new life into High Wycombe’s historic quarter.
I’m delighted that with help from the Architectural Heritage Fund, the partnership between the Council and the Trust will preserve this important building.‘
The Architectural Heritage Fund grant was made under its second round of Transformational Project Grants intended to help charities and social enterprises transform.redundant heritage buildings that have the prospect of becoming high street assets to the local community.
*Source of article : Press release from Buckinghamshire Council.