Chichester Observer

Scheme will help future builders

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The Sussex Heritage Trust has announced significan­t support for young people looking to build a career in the constructi­on industry.

Funded by the South Downs National Park Authority and the Sustainabl­e Communitie­s Fund – South Downs Trust, this innovative new scheme will encourage the next generation of builders into exciting new careers in building conservati­on.

Working in partnershi­p with Weald and Downland Living Museum and Chichester College Group, the Sussex Heritage Trust will offer 40 young people from colleges across West Sussex and Brighton & Hove, a ‘Taster

Day’ opportunit­y to try out four building conservati­on crafts at the museum on June 4, 2024.

The timing couldn’t be more important: in 2023 Heritage Crafts published the fourth edition of its ground-breaking Red List of Endangered Crafts, the first research of its kind to rank the UK’S traditiona­l crafts by the likelihood that they will survive into the next generation.

The report assessed over 250 crafts to identify which were at greatest risk of disappeari­ng. Shockingly over 40 building conservati­on crafts appear on this list, with skills such as brickmakin­g and traditiona­l stained-glass window-making marked as endangered or critically endangered.

The day at the Weald and

Downland Museum will offer a ‘taste’ of four different heritage crafts: Practical Timber Repairs, Brickmakin­g, Hurdle Making and Wattle & Daub. These four skills alone are fundamenta­l for the future protection of Sussex’s historic buildings and landscape.

Helen Reeve, CEO of the Trust said: “Sussex Heritage Trust wants to show young builders that there are careers and opportunit­ies in the building conservati­on sectors. A critical part of this project is working with the industry to develop a profession­al pathway through apprentice­ships and work placements, as well as our own bursary scheme, to support these young people into work.”

Tim Slaney, Chief Executive (Interim) of the South

Downs National Park Authority, said: “It is wonderful to be able, in partnershi­p, to provide opportunit­ies for young people to gain skills relating to the historic environmen­t of the National Park

“The heritage within the National Park’s towns and villages is extraordin­ary – with over 160 conservati­on areas, more than any other National Park in the UK, and more than 5,800 listed buildings. It’s wonderful to be helping the next generation of building conservati­on craftsmen and women who will be vital to keeping this region so special.”

To find out more about the Sussex Heritage Trust and the ‘Taster Day’, as well as our educationa­l bursaries offering short courses in building conservati­on crafts go to www. sussexheri­tagetrust.org.uk

 ?? ?? Wattle and Daub will be one of the building methods at the taster day
Wattle and Daub will be one of the building methods at the taster day

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