The repair/replacement of defective windows will be covered under the funding.

Funding for historic Tipp sites

Tipperary’s Corabella House, Newcastle, and Pádraig Ó Cuinneáin’s, Thurles, have been awarded funding to conserve notable historic structures under the Historic Structures Fund 2022.

The sites have been awarded funding for diverse reasons including remoulding original Gaelic writing, repair/replacement of defective windows, repair of weather slating, internal plastering and check source of water ingress at failed plaster.

A total of €4m was awarded nationwide through the Historic Structures Fund (HSF), administered by the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage in partnership with the 31 Local Authorities. The announcement follows that of €4m in funding under the Department’s other built heritage grant scheme, the Built Heritage Investment Scheme, earlier this month. The award to Pádraig Ó Cuinneáin’s is being made in conjunction with the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media under a special initiative to encourage the preservation of shopfronts in the Irish language.

In addition to supporting owners and custodians of historic and protected structures to safeguard and maintain their properties, this funding will also provide a welcome boost to conservation professionals and tradespeople, including in specialist heritage roles such as thatching and stone work. Following on from the successful introduction of the Historic Shopfront Stream last year, the HSF has again made funding available for a range of shopfronts including bars and pubs which operate in buildings of historical significance.

Through grants of between €15,000 and €200,000, the HSF assists owners of heritage structures – including those on the local authorities’ Record of Protected Structures and those in Architectural Conservation Areas – to meet their obligations to care for their properties. The scheme provides assistance to a wide range of heritage structures – this year’s HSF includes awards to historic bridges, castles, churches, mills, libraries, shopfronts, and an old forge, as well as to private houses.

Announcing the awards today, Minister of State for Heritage and Electoral Reform, Malcolm Noonan, said: "I am delighted to announce another €4m investment in our built heritage. This year’s Historic Structures Fund will assist 78 owners and custodians of historic and protected structures across the country as they carry out hundreds of conservation projects to repair and safeguard our built heritage. I am particularly pleased to announce the awards made to vernacular structures and historic shopfronts following their successful pilot schemes last year. These awards celebrate the richness and diversity of our built heritage and help to preserve our connections to past generations, in particular through their support of traditional building skills, which this Government is committed to investing in. These actions also help us to deliver on our commitments to built heritage under Heritage Ireland 2030, the national heritage plan which I launched earlier this year."