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Ulster Architectural Heritage Recieves Support from Heritage Recovery Fund.

Ulster Architectural Heritage receives grant of £49,000 from the Heritage Recovery Fund to help recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Posted on: 15th February 2021
  • 91 organisations and individuals have been awarded grants through the Heritage Recovery Fund to help recover from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
  • The Heritage Recovery Fund is being distributed by The National Lottery Heritage Fund on behalf of the Department for Communities
  • The fund is part of the £29million Executive allocation to support the arts, culture, heritage and language sectors in Northern Ireland.

Ulster Architectural Heritage has been awarded £49,000 to help recover from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The National Lottery Heritage Fund announced grants to help 50 organisations and 41 individuals adapt, recover and re-open following the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Grants from the Heritage Recovery Fund were awarded to a wide range of organisations and individuals in the heritage sector, from historic sites, attractions and landscapes, to tour guides and specialist heritage conservators.

The funding will help Ulster Architectural Heritage engage with new audiences online whilst our building remains closed, it will help UAH enhance digital management systems, and will help us to continue paying costs otherwise supported by lost income through to March 2021.

Nikki McVeigh, Chief Executive of Ulster Architectural Heritage outlines what the funding means to the organisation. “We’re grateful to the Department for Communities and The National Lottery Heritage Fund for providing this funding. Thanks to this grant, we can continue paying vital costs, enhance our online delivery formats, and continue to look after the Old Museum Building so it’s ready for visitors when we can re-open again.”

The Heritage Recovery Fund is part of the £29 million Executive allocation that was made to the Department for Communities to support the arts, culture, heritage and language sectors which have been severely impacted by COVID-19.

This is the latest package of support from The National Lottery Heritage Fund to support the heritage sector across the UK throughout the COVID-19 crisis. Last year, the organisation committed over £600million of National Lottery and Government funding to more than 1,500 heritage organisations, along with expertise and advice on adapting to the pandemic.

Paul Mullan, The National Lottery Heritage Fund, said:

“We are grateful to the Department for Communities for providing this funding and enabling us to help a wide range of organisations and individuals in Northern Ireland’s heritage sector to recover from the current crisis.

“The risks to heritage sites, attractions and organisations from a sudden and dramatic loss of income as a result of the pandemic, have put the heritage and visitor economy in crisis, and this funding will play a vital role in their recovery.

“Heritage has an essential role to play in making communities better places to live, creating economic prosperity and supporting personal wellbeing. All of these are going to be vitally important as we emerge from the current pandemic.”

To find out more about The National Lottery Heritage Fund, go to: www.heritagefund.org.uk

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