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Burgh Hall Dunoon, Scotland Building, Project, News, Design, Property, Image
Burgh Hall, Dunoon, Scotland : Architecture Information
Redevelopment by John McAslan + Partners in Scotland, Europe
John McAslan + Partners
22 Apr 2009
SCOTTISH ARCHITECTURE GEM SAVED OPEN DAY 2 MAY 2009
The John McAslan Family Trust is currently heading the transformation
of the
derelict, Grade B-listed Burgh Hall in Dunoon, a gem of Victorian
civic
architecture by Glaswegian architect Robert Bryden. Still regarded
as Dunoons most significant civic building, the Burgh Hall was
in a severe state of disrepair and
without a future when acquired by the John McAslan Family Trust in
November 2008.
Before first phase on restoration:

Burgh Hall Dunoon - Images : John McAslan + Partners
The Trust is currently transforming the building into a community
arts centre in
collaboration with the Friends of the Burgh Hall and the local community.
The Burgh
Hall demonstrates that with local support, limited funds and a phased
delivery
plan, communities can regenerate their civic derelict buildings for
future use.
The Burgh Hall will re-open on 2 May 2009 with a day of festivities,
including live
music, highland dancing, a display of paintings and drawings from
the Glasgow Boys, loaned from the Ewan Mundy Fine Art Gallery in Glasgow,
and an exhibition of photographs of the A8 Road Corridor by acclaimed
Magnum photographer Martin Parr.
After first phase of restoration:

Burgh Hall Dunoon - Images : John McAslan + Partners
The Open Day aims to be like a US-styled Country Fair where the building
is open to everybody in the community to exhibit and contribute.
Originally opened in 1874, the Burgh Hall was for a time the only
theatre in Argyll
and remained a focus of public life up until the 1960s. Designed in
Scots Baronial
style by Robert Bryden, the Burgh Hall had an initial capacity of
500, marking
Dunoons rising popularity as one of the most important resorts
on the western coast of Scotland.
John McAslan, Principal of international architecture practice John
McAslan + Partners, adds, “I was brought up in Dunoon and remember
visiting the Burgh Hall during my childhood. It is a fantastic piece
of civic architecture, with its local green schist stone façades and
elaborate internal plasterwork still intact. It was crying out to
be saved and brought back to life as a community arts centre, and
that is exactly what we aim to achieve. We plan to return this wonderful
building into active use for the local community by early 2011. To
date, In terms of funding, the JMFT has committed close to £100,000
to the project and we are now appealing for significant additional
funding to complete the project, the total cost of which could be
close to £1.5 million.”
To date, works carried out include: removal of asbestos, roof repairs,
dry and wet rot remedial works, window repairs, basic plumbing, electrics
and redecoration, with sufficient repairs to bring the building back
into use. Phase 2 of the project will bring the building back into
active use, including external repairs to the stonework, guttering
and stained glass window, painting and decorating, providing a stair
lift, more toilets, a Friends Room, an exhibition/meeting space, as
well as lighting and equipment for the main hall. Phases 3 and 4 will
create a booking office, bookshop, a café, a caretaker’s flat, installation
of a lift and the restoration of the balcony in the main hall.
After third phase of restoration - exterior + interior:
Burgh Hall Dunoon - Images : John McAslan + Partners
Currently Dunoon’s cultural highlight is the world's biggest Highland
Games, the Cowal Games, which are held every August and attended by
3,500 competitors from around the globe. The John McAslan Family Trust’s
aim is that the Burgh Hall project will provide continuous support
for the town’s creative industry base, to supplement the Cowal Games
and the town’s holiday resort status.
John McAslan adds, “There is a huge amount of work still to be done
to fully repair and fit out the building with arts spaces, community
facilities and a fully operational performance space. The Open Day
on 2nd May is intended to celebrate the building’s rescue and also
to highlight the considerable conservation and renewal work that lies
ahead.”
Comedian Billy Connolly famously mourned Dunoon’s declining tourist
trade during the 1960s with a comic tirade entitled, “Why don’t they
come back to Dunoon?” The town can also claim a number of thespian
supporters, including Emma Thompson, who has a house in the town and
Kate Winslet, who spent her honeymoon there. Julianne Moore’s mother
was born in Dunoon and the actress still has family in the town.
The area also has a rich political history: Holy Loch became internationally
famous during the Cold War when in 1961 the US navy submarine USS
Proteus brought Polaris ballistic missiles, nuclear submarines and
CND protestors to the Firth of Clyde at nearby Sandbank, and Dunoon
provided shore facilities. It proved to be the most active and sustained
campaigns of protest in modern British history and threatened to drive
a wedge between Britain and America. Today, the area has close links
with the US, further emphasised by Scotland’s Year of Homecoming,
an events programme celebrating Scotland’s great contributions to
the world, including its rich culture and heritage.
Scottish Buildings
John McAslan + Partners
John McAslan + Partners is a leading architectural and design practice,
based in London, Manchester and Edinburgh, with a large portfolio
of award-winning work in Britain and overseas. The practice has an
outstanding track-record in transformational schemes involving culturally
and historically significant buildings. The practice develops projects
through its individual, specialist Units, which deliver interventional
or new build schemes that are underwritten by a comprehensively skilled,
multi-disciplinary approach. These Units apply targeted expertise
to Historic Buildings, Education, Urban Planning, Mixed-Use and Commercial,
and Interior Design. The practice has also been centrally involved
in generating funds and project development plans for transformational
schemes involving culturally important buildings.
In many of its projects, the practice - using up to 10% of its pretax
profits - has set up linked pro bono schemes to involve local young
people. A separate trust fund has funded a variety of additional schemes
in Britain and abroad, including the McAslan/ICE Bursary scheme, administered
by the RIBA, to involve young architects and engineers in small-scale
design projects.
John McAslan + Partners’ work has been published extensively throughout
the world, and has won more than 50 international awards. This year
alone, and for a single project, the practice has been awarded four
prestigious prizes for its architectural reinvention of the Roundhouse
in London: a Europa Nostra Medal; an RIBA Award; a BCI Award and an
English Heritage Award. The practice was selected as Architect of
the Year and Masterplanning Architect of the Year in 2006, and has
previously been named Architectural Practice of the Year in 1998,
1999, and 2002. www.mcaslan.co.uk and www.mcaslan-family-trust.com
Robert Bryden
Robert Bryden left a considerable legacy of late-Victorian civic buildings
including Dunoon’s Town Hall (1873, now demolished), St Cuthbert’s
Church (1874) and the town’s Infants’ School (1880), as well as several
prominent buildings in Glasgow including a Home for Destitute Children
(1875) and Hillhead Western Baths Glasgow (1876).
Dunoon
Dunoon is the seaboard gateway to the Scottish Highlands, including
the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park. Dunoon became a prime
holiday destination in the 1800s in the heyday of the paddle steamer.
Situated on the banks of the river Clyde Dunoon is still a resort
destination with a population of approximately 10 thousand which increases
during the holiday period. The Cowal Highland Gathering (www.cowalgathering.com),
held in Dunoon during August, is the largest and most spectacular
Highland gathering in the world, with 3,500 competitors from around
the globe.
Political history
During talks at Camp David in March 1959, US President Eisenhower
suggested to the British Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, that a
submarine base in Scottish waters would be needed by the US Navy.
Macmillan was cautious and noted in his diary, “A picture could well
be drawn of some frightful accident which might devastate the whole
of Scotland.” However despite the remark, as the Cold War intensified
Holy Loch became internationally famous when in 1961 the US navy submarine
USS Proteus brought Polaris ballistic missiles, nuclear submarines
and CND protestors to the Firth of Clyde at nearby Sandbank, and Dunoon
provided shore facilities. It proved to be the most active and sustained
campaigns of protest in modern British history. For a time, the issue
of the Clyde base threatened to create divisions within the British
defence establishment, and to drive a wedge between the British and
their American allies. 1n 1992, the base was deemed unnecessary following
the demise of the Soviet Union and subsequently withdrawn.
Famous Dunoon residents – past and present
· Sir Harry Lauder (1870-1950), whose mansion, Laudervale, stood just
south of Dunoon on Bullwood Road. After a fire, which destroyed more
than half the house, the building remained in a ruined state until
c. 1980 when it was finally demolished. Much of the grounds were subsequently
sold for housing development, which preserves the Laudervale name.
· Eric Campbell, the silent film comedian famous as Charlie Chaplin's
hulking nemesis in several short films, was born in the town, and
a plaque to his memory can be seen in the gardens at Castle Hill.
· Virginia Bottomley (Baroness Bottomley of Nettlestone) was born
in Dunoon, as were former Manchester United player and QPR manager
Stewart Houston, Sylvester McCoy, and Tom Wisniewski of the Christian
punk band MxPx. · American actress Julianne Moore’s mother is originally
from the town and Moore still has family in the area. · Neil MacFarlane,
a professional footballer who reached the 2008 Scottish Cup Final
with Queen of the South, was born in the town. · Grant Morrison, writer
of Superman and Batman comic books, has moved from hometown Glasgow
to a renovated mansion just outside of Dunoon, and spends part of
the year in the town, and part in Los Angeles. · Oscar winning actress
Emma Thompson married husband Greg Wise in Dunoon in 2003. They have
a second home in the town.
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